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  1. Without School: Education as Common(ing) Activities in Local Social Infrastructures – An Escape from Extinction Ethics.Jordi Collet-Sabé & Stephen J. Ball - 2024 - British Journal of Educational Studies 72 (4):441-456.
    In this third paper in a series of four, we explore some ways of doing education differently. An education that moves beyond the persistent failures and irredeemable injustices of modern mass schooling episteme. The episteme for education we adumbrate – an episteme of life continuance – begins with a recognition of interdependency and the value of diversity, diverse knowledges and relations of tolerance. We propose an escape from the extinction ethics which modern schools perpetuate and a new grammar of living (...)
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  • Racism, white supremacy and Roberto Esposito’s biopolitics through the lens of Black affect studies: Implications for an affirmative educational biopolitics.Michalinos Zembylas - 2024 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 56 (4):358-370.
    The objective of this article is to engage in a critical review of Roberto Esposito’s biopolitical account by including a thoroughgoing interrogation of racism and white supremacy through the lens of Black affect studies. It is argued that both white supremacy studies and Esposito’s framework could work side-by-side in ways that are productive for affirmative educational biopolitics. In particular, the analysis highlights two insights: first, engagement with white supremacy as a biopolitical category—in particular, white supremacy as an affective embodiment—is essential (...)
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  • Re-politicizing the scholastic: school and schoolchildren between politicization and de-politicization.Itay Snir - 2016 - Ethics and Education 11 (2):117-130.
    This paper addresses the question ‘what is school?’, and argues that the answer to this question has an essential political dimension. I focus on two very different attempts to characterize school – Ivan Illich’s Deschooling Society and Jan Masschelein and Maarten Simons’s In Defence of the School – and demonstrate that both texts miss the political potential which is inherent in school. The two texts are analyzed along two relational axes: relations between school and society, and relations between children and (...)
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  • Review of Tyson E. Lewis, On Study: Giorgio Agamben and Educational Potentiality: Routledge, 2013. [REVIEW]Derek R. Ford - 2013 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 33 (1):105-111.
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