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Language: English
A 2022 SPE Outstanding Book Award Winner
Anticipating Education is an interdisciplinary collection of Britzman’s previously published and unpublished papers that examines the dilemmas created by anticipating education, provoked when teachers, students, and professors encounter the unknown while trying to know emotional situations affecting their waiting, wanting, and wishing for teaching and learning. Anticipation has a particular flavor in scenes of education and not only since schooling presents again the mise-en-scène of childhood; anticipation also signifies the estranged temporality of anxiety, phantasies, and defense that compose and decompose hopes for transforming knowledge, sociality, and subjectivity in group life.
This book is composed of Britzman’s well regarded and highly cited conceptual contributions to thinking broadly on topics of intersubjectivity and pedagogy at the university and schools; the reception of difficult knowledge as unresolved social conflicts in pedagogical thought; and the significance of psychoanalysis with pedagogy. Four themes address the anxieties of teaching and learning: phantasies of education; difficult knowledge; transforming subjects; and, psychoanalysis with education.
Anticipating Education is required reading for every newly-minted faculty member. The wisdom provided in this volume will prove to be invaluable to your future career.
Perfect for courses such as: Foundations of Education | Theories of Teaching and Learning | Special Topics | Advanced Curriculum Theory | Philosophy of Education | Social Thought and Education | Studies of Language, Culture and Teaching | Child and Adolescent DevelopmentAcknowledgments
Prelude: Late Education
Part I: Phantasies Of Education
Chapter 1
A Note On Transference To Reading
Chapter 2
On Not Being Able To Write
Chapter 3
The Homoerotic Turn
Chapter 4
Teacher Education In The Confusion Of Our Times
Part II: Difficult Knowledge
Chapter 5
On Some Psychical Consequences of AIDS Education
Chapter 6
The Death Of Curriculum?
Chapter 7
The Fate Of Being A Stranger
Part III: Transforming Subjects
Chapter 8
Public Education As States Of Mind
Chapter 9
‘Each To Each’ And The Equality Of Vulnerability
Chapter 10
Notes On The Poetics Of Supervision
Chapter 11
Some Psychoanalytic Observations On Ordinary, Quiet, And Painful Resistance
Part IV: Psychoanalysis With Pedagogy
Chapter 12
‘Even In Cambridge’
Chapter 13
What Is Emotional About Our Emotional Situation?
Chapter 14
On Disquieting Imagination, Indeterminacy, Aesthetic Conflicts, And Grouch Days
About The Author
Index of Selected Concepts For Imagining Pedagogy With Psychoanalysis
NOTE: Table of contents subject to change up to final publication date.
“In Anticipating Education, Deborah Britzman draws on three decades’ worth of profound reflection on education, seen through the prism of critical and psychoanalytic ideas. The result is a wonderful short book, in which she creates a tapestry of insightful and moving observations on how education can be revolutionised by thought that carries emotion and politics with it. Education emerges from this book as an essential catalyst for living a full life.”
“This book is a marvelous instance of the psychoanalytic truth which good educators must learn to work with, that we all inhabit a precarious life-world that is structured by anticipation and ‘afterwardness’. Deborah Britzman gathers together earlier papers for us, supplementing them with typically thoughtful additional reflections on what is usually un-thought in pedagogical practice. Now we can rediscover how prescient all this is, and grasp the opportunity of benefitting from it before it is too late.”
Ian Parker, Secretary, Manchester Psychoanalytic Matrix
“In these exquisitely crafted essays, Deborah P. Britzman personifies her psychoanalytic state of mind, entering what she calls the crypt of curriculum, asking: 'why curriculum at all?' This book is itself the resounding answer. Enlivening knowledge through her thinking, Deborah’s insights invite us inside thought itself, where complicated conversation can commence. If you have—as I do—a shelf in your library devoted to Britzman, be sure to add this one. If space limits you to one Britzman book, make it this one.”
William F. Pinar, Tetsuo Aoki Professor in Curriculum Studies, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
“Dr. Britzman—leading international authority on psychoanalysis and education and practicing psychoanalyst—offers a collection of her work written with intellectual depth, immense virtuosity, and whole heart. Britzman’s repertoire is wide-ranging as she instructs us why we must not forget there is no emotional situation-free zone for education. I can’t think of any contemporary scholar and writer who has more poet in her soul; this volume will be one of the most treasured books in the field of psychoanalysis and education.”
Jenna Min Shim, Professor and Associate Dean in College of Education, University of Wyoming
“Deborah Britzman has written so many beautiful books about pedagogy and psychoanalysis that you may be thinking ‘why this one?’ Hands down, this is Britzman’s best book yet: lyrical, incisive, rigorous, true. The book is ultimately about love as the highest intellectual pursuit, and education as its vehicle. It is a tour de force. I could not put it down. In a world where students are more anxious than ever, and teachers stand at the threshold of burnout, you may be asking yourselves what we possibly can do now. Start here. Read this book.”
Dawn Skorczewski, Research Professor Emerita, Brandeis University
“This erudite and poetic book offers an invitation to return to the source of education, a place of vulnerability, anguish, wonderment and possibility. Beneath the 'mind-numbing stultification' of bureaucratized schooling can be found teachers seeking to embrace childhood subjectivity and difference and release the imagination. This book is for such educators. In its expansiveness and vision, this book builds on the work of Paulo Freire and Maxine Greene to articulate a pedagogy of the imagination. Britzman illustrates the beautiful complementarity of psychoanalysis and critical educational theory in articulating a pedagogy of interiority, social justice, and creative possibility that so many educators hunger for.”
Michael O’Loughlin, Adelphi University, New York