Una subversión en las prácticas de indagación: tan serias como divertidas

Autores

  • Joanna Haynes Plymouth University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12795/araucaria.2021.i48.16

Palavras-chave:

Enquiry, unhoming, philosophy-for/with, picturebooks, creative.

Resumo

This paper is concerned with unhoming secure ideas and practices of knowledge creation, through non-hierarchical, boundary-crossing forms of pedagogy, in order to attend to how processes of enquiry matter, whenever we engage in the struggle to address injustice, and not only for humans. Entrenched assumptions related to age, phase, or education setting, are brought into question, to blur distinctions such as for/with; child/adult; playful/serious and learning/teaching/research and to explore further possibilities for creative enquiry. Practices of enquiry are theorised through the movement of Philosophy for/with Children (Haynes, 2018), its community of enquiry pedagogy, (Gregory & Laverty, 2017) and philosophy with picturebooks (Haynes & Murris, 2012, 2016; Murris & Haynes, 2018). What more can happen, when vibrant matter is taken into account, is a driving question. “Thing-power” (Bennett, 2010) and “thinking-through-making” (Ingold, 2013) are activated as part of this exploration.  Through accounts of research events from two international projects, the paper draws attention to artists Viviane Schwartz and Paula Rego, their picturebook artworks, and their artistic processes. Each example shows how the artists, artworks and processes came into play through the events, provoking different forms of experimentation. Through exemplification, showing rather than telling, further possibilities for creative enquiry might be inspired.

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

##plugins.generic.paperbuzz.metrics##

Carregando Métricas ...

Biografia do Autor

Joanna Haynes, Plymouth University

Associate Professor

Referências

Auerbach, J.: Paula Rego: Telling Tales. DVD made by Jake Auerback Films Ltd, 2009.

Bennett, J.: Vibrant matter: A political ecology of things. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2010.

Birch, R.: “To what extent can hope be discerned during an Education for Sustainable Development Philosophy for/with Children workshop with young people?” MA Dissertation, University of Plymouth, 2019.

Braidotti, R.: The Posthuman, Cambridge: Polity Press 2013.

Chetty, D. & Suissa, J.: “‘No go areas’: Racism and discomfort in the community of inquiry”, in M.R. Gregory, J. Haynes, & K. Murris, (Eds) The Routledge International Handbook of Philosophy for Children, London and New York, Routledge, 2017.

Giorza, T. & Haynes, J.: “Beyond Words: materiality and the play of things” in K. Murris and J. Haynes (Eds), Literacies, Literature and Learning: reading classrooms differently, London and New York, 2018, 87-110.

Haynes, J.: Children as Philosophers: learning through enquiry and dialogue in the primary school, London, Routledge, 2002.

Haynes, J.: Listening as a Critical Practice: Learning through Philosophy with Children, PhD Thesis, University of Exeter, 2007.

Haynes, J.: “Already equal and able to speak: practising philosophical enquiry with young children” in Sue Robson and Suzanne Quinn (Eds), The Routledge International Handbook on Young Children’s Thinking and Understanding, London and New York, Routledge, 2014.

Haynes, J.: “The Movement of Philosophy with Children: Beyond Learning as Usual” in Sonia París Albert and Sofía Herrero Rico (Eds.), Pensamiento Creativo. Una herramienta con future. Madrid: Dykinson, S.L., publishers, 2018.

Haynes, J. & Murris, K.: Picturebooks, Pedagogy and Philosophy, London and New York, Routledge Research Series, 2012.

Haynes, J, & Murris, K.: “Intra-Generational Education: imagining a post-age pedagogy”, Educational Philosophy and Theory 49, 10, (2017), 971-983. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2016.1255171.

Haynes, J, & Murris, K.: “Taking Age Out of Play: Children’s Animistic Philosophising through a Picturebook” The Oxford Literary Review 41, 2 (2019), 290–309.

Ingold, T.: Making: Anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture. London and New York, Routledge, 2013.

Kennedy, D.: Changing Conceptions of the Child from the Renaissance to Post-Modernity: A Philosophy of Childhood, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2006.

Kennedy, D. & Kennedy, N.: “Community of Philosophical Inquiry as a Discursive Structure, and its Role in School Curriculum Design” Journal of Philosophy of Education, 45, 2, (2011), 265-283.

Kennedy, D. and Kohan,W.:”Aión, Kairós and Chrónos: Fragments of an endless conversation on childhood, philosophy and education” Childhood & Philosophy, 4, 8, 2008, [Online] Available from: www.periodicos.proped.pro.br/index.php?journal=childhood&page=index. [Accessed: 5th April 2012].

Kennedy, D. & Kohan, W. (2017) Childhood, education and philosophy: a matter of time. In Rollins Gregory, M., Haynes, J. and Murris, K. (Eds.) The Routledge International Handbook of Philosophy for Children. London: Routledge, 46-53.

Lin, C. C. & Sequiera, L. (Eds), Inclusion, Diversity, and Intercultural Dialogue in Young People’s Philosophical Inquiry, Rotterdam, Sense Publishers, 2017.

Murris, K. (2013). “The epistemic challenge of hearing child’s voice” Studies in Philosophy and Education, 32, 2, (2013), 245–259.

Murris, K.: (2017) Reading two rhizomatic pedagogies diffractively through one another: a Reggio inspired philosophy with children for the postdevelopmental child, Pedagogy, Culture & Society, 25, 4, (2017) 531-550. DOI: 10.1080/14681366.2017.1286681

Murris, K. & Haynes, J.: (Eds), Literacies, Literature and Learning: reading classrooms differently, London and New York, Routledge, 2018.

Murris, K., Reynolds, R. & Peers, J.: “Reggio Emilia inspired philosophical teacher education in the Anthropocene: Posthuman child and the family (tree)”, In Journal of Childhood Studies: Interdisciplinary Dialogues in Early Childhood Environmental Education Special Issue, 43, 1, (2018) 15-29.

Murris, K. & Haynes, J.: “Troubling authority and material bodies: creating sympoietic pedagogies for working with children and practitioners” Global Education Review Special Issue (forthcoming).

Opie, I. and Opie, P.: The Oxford Nursery Rhyme Book. Oxford University Press, 1955, 1979.

Paris-Albert, S., & Haynes, J.: “A Rethinking of Children at Stake: Musings for their Revaluation”, Araucaria, 22, 43, (2020), 197-214.

Quinn, J., Blandon, C., & Batson: “Living beyond words: post-human reflections on making music with post-verbal people”, Arts & Health, 2019, online. DOI: 10.1080/17533015.2019.1652194

Rautio, P.: “Children who carry stones in their pockets: on autotelic material practices in everyday life”, Children’s Geographies, 11, 4, (2013) 394-408. doi: 10.1080/14733285.2013.812278.

Reed-Sandoval, A. and Sykes, A.: “Who Talks? Who Listens? Taking Positionality Seriously in Philosophy for Children” in M.R. Gregory, J. Haynes & K. Murris (Eds), The Routledge International Handbook of Philosophy for Children, London and New York: Routledge, 2017, 219-224.

Rees-Jones, D.: Paula Rego: the Art of Story, London: Thames & Hudson, 2019.

Rego, P.: Nursery Rhymes, London: The Folio Society, 1994.

Reynolds, R. with Peers, J.: “Chairs and Questions at Work in Literacies” in Murris, K. & Haynes, J.: (Eds), Literacies, Literature and Learning: reading classrooms differently, London and New York, Routledge, 2018, 129-148.

Schwarz, V.: How to find gold, London: Walker Books 2016.

Sharp, A.M.: “The Community of Inquiry: Education for Democracy”, Thinking, The Journal of Philosophy for Children, 9, 2, (1991), 31-37.

Stones, R. & Mann, A.: Mother Goose Comes to Cable Street, illustrated by Dan Jones, Harmondsworth: Puffin Books, Penguin Books Ltd., 1980.

Thornton, S. & Burgh, G.: “Making peace education everyone’s business” in Lin, C. C. & Sequiera, L. (Eds), Inclusion, Diversity, and Intercultural Dialogue in Young People’s Philosophical Inquiry, Rotterdam, Sense Publishers, 2017.

Tiffany, G. A.: Community Philosophy: A project report. Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF): York, 2009, http://www.jrf.org.uk/publications/community-philosophy-project-report

Willing, N.: Paula Rego: Secrets and Stories, DVD, Kismet Film Company, 2016.

Downloads

Publicado

2021-11-27

Como Citar

Haynes, J. (2021). Una subversión en las prácticas de indagación: tan serias como divertidas. Araucaria, 23(48). https://doi.org/10.12795/araucaria.2021.i48.16
Visualizações
  • Resumo 1250
  • PDF (English) 113