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Welcome! Postscript on hospitality, cosmopolitanism, and the other

In Derrida, Deconstruction, and the Politics of Pedagogy. Peter Lang (2009)

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  1. Teaching Online in an Ethic of Hospitality: Lessons from a Pandemic.Rebeca Heringer - 2021 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 41 (1):39-53.
    With the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, teaching online became a norm for universities in Canada. Besides the challenges of teaching topics that may be impossible to be taught online, a major issue that the mandatory physical distancing brought is the relationality between teachers and students. In order to investigate how educators were making sense of such changes, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 12 education professors across Canada. In light of Derrida’s and Ruitenberg’s ethic of hospitality, this paper explores (...)
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  • The European 'We': From Citizenship Policy to the Role of Education.Maria Olson - 2011 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 31 (1):77-89.
    This article sheds light on the European Union’s policy on citizenship; on the collective dimension of this policy, its ‘we’. It is argued that the inclusive, identity-constituting forces prominent in EU policy on European citizenship serve as a basis for the exclusion of people, which is illustrated by the recent expulsion of Romani from France. Based on a reading of Derrida, the twofold aim of this article is to reformulate the concept of a European citizenship ‘we’ and secondly, to outline (...)
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  • Inexhaustible education: on supplementarity and a youth work “yet-to-come”.Jesse Albert Torenbosch, Jonathan Darling & Joke Vandenabeele - 2024 - Ethics and Education 19 (2):143-167.
    Following the work of Jacques Derrida and modern educational authors, this article argues that Western education currently holds mainstream formal educational practices as the standard by which all other educational practices should be judged. This is a problem because this positions every other educational practice, including non-formal education as supplemental to formal education. Derrida calls this the logic of supplementarity. Drawing on data from over 2 years of research in Flemish youth work, that the logic of supplementarity inhibits non-formal educational (...)
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  • Exploring ‘Gift’ Theories for New Immigrants' Literacy Education in Taiwan.Ho-Chia Chueh - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (10):1110-1120.
    This paper addresses ‘the gift’ as the central concept in a discussion about the literacy education for new immigrants that has been developing in Taiwan since the early 1990s. The point of departure for this discussion is the advent of international marriages that are the consequence of new arrivals from Southeast Asia and China, and their effect guest/host relationship. In the first half of the article, I apply Marcel Mauss' idea of gift in order to examine the interactions within this (...)
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