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Schools of Recognition: Identity Politics and Classroom Practices

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers (2001)

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  1. On Paulo Freire's Debt to Psychoanalysis: Authority on the Side of Freedom.Charles Bingham - 2002 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 21 (6):447-464.
    Paulo Freire's major work, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, owes adebt to psychoanalysis. In particular, as this paper argues,Freire's account of teacher authority needs to be understoodthrough psychoanalytic sensibilities. Paulo Freire maintains thatteacher authority can be ``on the side of freedom.'' This is ahighly charged claim given that liberalist traditions generallycast authority as the enemy of freedom. Breaking with liberalunderstandings of authority, Freire's ``authority on the sideof freedom'' is a matter of maintaining the delicate psychicbalance that leads neither to domination nor (...)
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  • The Problematic Challenges of Misrecognition for Pedagogic Action.Teemu Hanhela - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (1):1-15.
    This article aims to critically examine how misrecognition is conceived as a challenge for pedagogic action.Krassimir Stojanov’s notion of the pathological behaviour patterns of teachers and Charles Bingham’s ‘pitfalls of recognition’ introduce how misrecognition may appear in schools, and offer advice to teachers and students on responding to the challenges of misrecognition.Their ideas elicit the problems embedded in the theory of recognition and the problems resulting from understanding misrecognition as a challenge for pedagogic action.This article concludes that recognition theory offers (...)
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  • Settling no Conflict in the Public Place: Truth in education, and in Rancièrean scholarship.Charles Bingham - 2010 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 42 (5-6):649-665.
    This essay offers an educational understanding of truth deriving from the work of Jacques Rancière. Unlike other educational accounts—the traditional, progressive, and critical accounts—of truth that take education as a way of approaching pre‐existing truths (or lack of pre‐existing truths), this essay establishes an account of truth that is intrinsic to education. It uses Rancière's language theory to do so, showing that Rancière's own perspective on truth is in fact opposed to the one so often promoted in and through education. (...)
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