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Cutting Through Water : Towards a Posthuman Theory of Educational Relationality

Author

  • Simon Ceder

Summary, in English

Based on an ongoing debate—academic as well as public—regarding the roles of the teacher and the student in education, this thesis explores educational relations within the field of philosophy of education. After critically examining intersubjective approaches to theories of educational relations, I localize anthropocentrism and subject-centrism (teacher/student) as two problematic aspects of the aforementioned approaches. These aspects are deeply connected with various humanistic ideas. Instead, I turn to posthuman philosophy and more specifically, I propose post-anthropocentrism and intra-relationality as a theoretical framework. Diffraction is hereby suggested as an appropriate posthuman methodology that reads texts and memory stories relationally in order to develop new ideas. The theory and methodology used are mainly inspired by posthuman feminist philosophers Karen Barad and Donna Haraway.

The main contribution of the thesis is introducing and developing a posthuman theory of educational relations, which is called educational relationality. The main analysis is executed through a diffractive reading of intersubjective theories on educational relations and posthuman philosophy, resulting in five co-concepts. The first co-concept developed is impermanence, which means that educational relationality and the world are constantly in movement. Uniqueness-as-relationality proposes that uniqueness appears relationally, rather than connected to a single human subject. Proximity describes the closeness of relationality, which is ethical, material, and sensible. Edu-activity is where education is located according to educational relationality. Finally, intelligibility is suggested as a posthuman approach to learning. The co-concepts conceptualize the theory of educational relationality. I ground these concepts with two educational examples, literacy dogs and augmented reality technology, which are read through the co-concepts and additional posthuman philosophy. The analysis provided through these examples demonstrates the potential of using the proposed theory and its co-concepts in everyday practices, even when nonhumans are a part of the educational relation.

Department/s

Publishing year

2016

Language

English

Document type

Dissertation

Publisher

Lund University

Topic

  • Pedagogy

Keywords

  • diffraction
  • educational relationality
  • humanism
  • intra-relationality
  • posthumanism

Status

Published

Supervisor

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISBN: 978-91-7623-605-5
  • ISBN: 978-91-7623-604-8

Defence date

5 February 2016

Defence time

13:15

Defence place

Nedre Palaestra, Paradisgatan 4, Lund

Opponent

  • Sharon Todd (professor)