Positing that education is a movement from one way of being to another, more desirable one, An Intense Calling argues that ethics should be the prime focus for the field of education. The book locates ethics, education, and justice in human subjectivity and describes education as a necessary practice for ethical reflexivity, change, and becoming (ethically) different. It also situates ethics as something that exceeds subjectivity, thereby engaging ethics as a material phenomenon through topics such as aesthetics and solidarity with non-humans.

Jesse Bazzul explores various concepts in the book including power, biopolitics, the commons, subjectivity, and materiality, and draws from over twenty years of experience teaching in different countries including Canada, Ireland, the United States, China, and Ukraine. Taking a wide-ranging philosophical approach, the book entangles ethics, urgent political issues, and pressing educational contexts of the twenty-first century. In doing so, An Intense Calling maintains that ethics is the core of education because education involves finding better ways of living and being in the world.

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This book re-centres the practice and discipline of ethics as the core aspect of education.

List of Illustrations and Tables

Part 1: Ethics and Subjectivity

Preface: A Mapping of Education and Ethics
1. (Un)disciplined: Education as an Open Work
2. Multiplicity and the Commons
3. Education Needs Politics and Imagination
4. Ethics and Subjectivity: The Vital Terrain of Education

Part 2: Ethics as Ontological Exploration

5. Outside the Subject of Ethics
6. Assemblages and the Emergence of Difference
7. Aesthetics and Environmentality
8. Solidarity with Nonhumans

Notes

Index

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Product details

ISBN
9781487547868
Published
2023-03-02
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Weight
490 gr
Height
235 mm
Width
155 mm
Thickness
19 mm
Age
U, P, 05, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
226

Author

Biographical note

Jesse Bazzul is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Regina.