Holes, Gaps, and Openings: Crafting Collective Climate Pedagogies with/in Complex Common Worlds

IF 1.1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Nicole Land, Lisa-Marie Gagliardi, Meagan Montpetit
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Holes, the concept that holds together this special issue of the Journal of Childhood Studies , may seem a strange choice as a metaphor for a collective project like this, yet holes poke through each article we share in “Responding to Ecological Challenges with/in Contemporary Childhoods.” In this editorial we ask what centering holes, gaps, and openings might make possible for reinvigorating the relations of the interdisciplinary colloquium on climate pedagogies that sparked, and shares its name with, this special issue. Held in February 2020, the colloquium took place on the lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak, and Attawandaron peoples, at Western University. This special issue picks up strands of thinking shared at the event and asks: How might we, more than two years later—two viral, extraordinary years—reenter the colloquium’s openings and explore its gaps and holes? We see holes as endemic to climate realities: We dig literal holes, large and small, into the ground while the profound erasures and egotism of anthropocentrism pretend not to notice the holes increasingly needled into the Euro-Western fallacy of its impenetrable skeleton. Concurrently, we see holes as a practice of hope—a mark worth tending to and ready to be cared for as a way of immersing ourselves into the mess and vitality of our contemporary worlds. As we worked on this special issue, we met many holes: COVID-shaped holes in our timelines, holes in our memories, and increasingly urgent holes in our own scholarship as we imagined how we might respond well to our ever changing common worlds. Before visiting with each article and its hole-making, we propose three manifestations of holes that poke through the articles: holes as fragile reading practices, puncturing holes in the human, and thinking holes with climate pedagogies. We invite readers to experiment with these holes. Within
漏洞、缺口和缺口:在复杂的共同世界中制作集体气候教学法
《儿童研究杂志》这期特刊用“洞”这个概念来比喻这样一个集体项目,似乎有点奇怪,但我们在《当代儿童应对生态挑战》中分享的每一篇文章中都有“洞”。在这篇社论中,我们提出了这样一个问题:在气候教育学的跨学科研讨会上,有哪些中心的漏洞、缺口和缺口,可能会使这种关系重新焕发活力,这种关系引发了这一特别问题,并与之同名。该研讨会于2020年2月在西部大学的Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnaapéewak和Attawandaron人民的土地上举行。本期特刊收集了会议上大家分享的一些想法,并提出了这样一个问题:在两年多之后——这是两年病毒式传播、非同寻常的一年——我们该如何重新进入研讨会的开幕式,探索它的缺口和漏洞?我们把洞视为气候现实的特有特征:我们在地上挖洞,或大或小,而人类中心主义的深刻抹除和自我主义假装没有注意到这些洞,这些洞越来越多地刺入了欧洲-西方的谬论,即其不可穿透的骨架。与此同时,我们把洞看作是希望的一种实践——一个值得照料和准备照顾的标记,作为一种让我们沉浸在当代世界的混乱和活力中的方式。在我们处理这一期特刊时,我们遇到了许多漏洞:我们的时间线上出现了与covid有关的漏洞,我们的记忆中出现了漏洞,在我们想象如何应对不断变化的共同世界时,我们自己的学术研究也出现了越来越紧迫的漏洞。在参观每一篇文章及其凿洞之前,我们提出了三种穿透文章的洞的表现形式:作为脆弱阅读实践的洞,刺穿人类的洞,以及用气候教学法思考的洞。我们邀请读者尝试这些漏洞。在
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来源期刊
Journal of Childhood Studies
Journal of Childhood Studies EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
自引率
11.10%
发文量
20
审稿时长
42 weeks
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