2012
DOI: 10.1007/s11217-012-9339-y
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Willed Forgetfulness: The Arts, Education and the Case for Unlearning

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Cited by 19 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Hansen et al, 2015); (iii) in early years education, as a way of exploring the fragmentation of the field (Bown & Sumsion, 2016) and addressing the gap between theory and practice (Moss, 2007); and finally (iv) in arts education (e.g. Baldacchino, 2013), as well as other educational literature (such as, Ljunggren, 2010), as an element of critical pedagogy and transformative learning.…”
Section: How Is Agonism Used In Educational Research?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hansen et al, 2015); (iii) in early years education, as a way of exploring the fragmentation of the field (Bown & Sumsion, 2016) and addressing the gap between theory and practice (Moss, 2007); and finally (iv) in arts education (e.g. Baldacchino, 2013), as well as other educational literature (such as, Ljunggren, 2010), as an element of critical pedagogy and transformative learning.…”
Section: How Is Agonism Used In Educational Research?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some problems of this are revealed if we adapt to the present discussion Baldacchino’s following words of caution: ‘the case for unlearning’ should not be ‘a case for rejecting what we have been taught. Nor is it a simple act of rejecting bad habits to learn new virtues, which, when turned once more into bad habits, would need to be replaced by something else’ (Baldacchino, 2013: 427). There is in this cycle a developmentalist logic, one that we may extrapolate from Baldacchino’s (p. 427) objection ‘to a process of choosing, selecting, evaluating, rejecting and learning anew’ as a panacea, that reproduces, we think, the politics of uncritical normativization of slogans and labels.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By challenging every single assumption that is held constant-such as that of learning and development through art and education-I find strength in Garoian's proposal. It may well be that this is not what Garoian wants or intends, and I am sure he would probably object to my insistence that there is no solace to be found in learning per se (see Baldacchino, 2013b;2014). Yet, far from being dystopian, I would argue that this is what we have and we cannot assume that we can have anything else, although this does not mean that we have lost the ability to transcend the here and now.…”
Section: Impassementioning
confidence: 96%
“…It may well be that this is not what Garoian wants or intends, and I am sure he would probably object to my insistence that there is no solace to be found in learning per se (See Baldacchino, 2013a and2014). Yet far from being dystopian, I…”
Section: Impassementioning
confidence: 98%