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Body Knowledge and Curriculum

Pedagogies of Touch in Youth and Visual Culture

by Stephanie Springgay (Author)
©2008 Textbook XVIII, 146 Pages

Summary

Body Knowledge and Curriculum examines student understandings of body knowledge in the context of creating and interrogating visual art and culture. It illustrates a six-month research study conducted in an alternative secondary school in a large urban city. During the research project, students created a number of visual art works using a diversity of material explorations as a means to think through the body as a process of exchange and as a bodied encounter. The book engages with feminist theories of touch and inter-embodiment, questioning the materiality and lived experiences of the body in knowledge production, in order to provoke different ways of theorizing self/other relations in teaching and learning. This volume is important because it explores the ways in which youth understand the complex, textured, and often contradictory discourses of body knowledge, and seeks to intentionally create alternative pedagogical and curricular practices to ones that subscribe to a healthy body model. Additionally, enacting educational research as living inquiry, this book is an exemplar of the arts-based methodology, a/r/tography. Body Knowledge and Curriculum is a valuable text for courses in curriculum theory, art education, qualitative research methodologies, visual culture and pedagogies, and feminist theory. Appropriate for advanced undergraduate students, pre-service teacher education students, and graduate students, the book provides an interdisciplinary investigation into body research.

Details

Pages
XVIII, 146
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9781433102813
Language
English
Keywords
Körperbild Fächerübergreifender Unterricht Body Knowledge Culture Visual art Projekt
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2008. XVIII, 146 pp.

Biographical notes

Stephanie Springgay (Author)

The Author: Stephanie Springgay is Assistant Professor of Art Education and Women’s Studies at the Pennsylvania State University. She received her Ph.D. in curriculum studies and art education at the University of British Columbia, Canada. Her research and artistic explorations focus on issues of relationality and an ethics of embodiment. She received the Arts and Learning SIG of the American Educational Research Association’s outstanding dissertation award for her work on youth and the body. In addition, as a multidisciplinary artist working with installation and video-based art, she investigates the relationship between artistic practices and methodologies of educational research through a/r/tography. Other books include Curriculum and the Cultural Body (Peter Lang, 2007), co-edited with Debra Freedman, and Being with A/r/tography (2007), co-edited with Rita Irwin, Carl Leggo, and Peter Gouzouasis.

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Title: Body Knowledge and Curriculum