shopping cart
nothing in cart
 
2012 resource catalogue
browse by subject
textbooks
new releases
best sellers
sale books
browse by author
browse by publisher
home
about us
upcoming events
Jun 21st - Couples and Relationship Educational Symposium (CARES) [KMT, The Learning Group]
Jun 21st - Employing Mindfulness in a Clinical Setting [SOS Workshops]
Jul 1st - Canada Day - Sunday Holiday [the legislators of statutory holidays]
Jul 6th - 2013 EXTENDED SPECIAL SERIES: Clinical Understanding of Trauma, Using Bion’s Approach [Toronto Psychoanalytic Society]
Jul 12th - Psychological Trauma Workshop [Mount Sinai Psychotherapy Institute - Mount Sinai Hospital, Department of Psychiatry]
schools agencies and other institutional orders (click here)
Lost Subjects, Contested Objects: Toward a Psychoanalytic Inquiry of Learning
Britzman, Deborah P.
SUNY Press (State University of New York) / Softcover / 1998-03-01 / 0791438082
Psychoanalysis / Toronto Authors
price: $34.95 (may be subject to change)
199 pages
Available within 2-4 weeks.

1998 American Educational Studies Association, Critics' Choice Titles

A study of love and hate in learning and an argument for why educators might begin with consideration of these psychical dynamics when interpreting the conflictive dreams of education.

"Britzman is the most eloquent proponent in education today insisting on the return of the educator's attention to Freudian theory/method. This is not a comforting insistence, but is made with careful argument and ethical force.

"She starts with the psychoanalytic insight that education is an interference with various (often unconscious) implications for learning, particularly in regard to the play of affect and its attachments (specifically those of love and hate). This means there is always conflict in learning, conflict not only between the teacher and learner, but crucially for this book, within the learner herself. Given its premise, Britzman unravels how institutionally mediated education is then necessarily uncertain, indeterminate, ambivalent. This is a position with radical implications for the increasingly rationalized, outcome-driven forms of teaching which have become so prevalent in the English-speaking world. It is an argument that insists we look again at what we call learning and at the ethical obligations such a reexamination elicits." -- Roger I. Simon, University of Toronto

This book argues for education's reconsideration of what psychoanalytic theories of love and hate might mean to the design of learning and pedagogy. Britzman sets in tension three perspectives: studies of education, studies in psychoanalysis, and studies of ethics to consider how larger social and cultural histories live in the small history of the subject. Britzman casts her net widely to consider questions of sex education, the work of Anna Freud in reencountering the Diary of Anne Frank, reading practices in pedagogy, anti-racist pedagogy and the question of love, and the arguments between education and psychoanalysis.

"The scholarship is impeccable, the arguments rigorous. Above all, the book avoids the substitution of jargon, whether psychoanalytic or 'educationist,' for thought; in its writing, scholarship, and arguments, it renders a certain difficult labor of thinking unavoidable. It's an outstanding piece of work, an important statement from a major thinker whose work should figure more prominently in the intellectual scene than it currently does." -- William Haver, Binghamton University

"She writes with incredible feeling and verve, never missing the chance for either the wit or high seriousness that comes of being sensitive to the presence of continuing uncertainties. This is a book to meet the strong and growing demand for Britzman's work. It is a work of serious critique and hope." -- John Willinsky, University of British Columbia

Contents:

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Toward a Psychoanalytic Inquiry of Learning

1. The Arts of Getting By

2. On Making Education Inconsolable

3. On Becoming a "Little Sex Researcher": Some Comments on a Polymorphously Perverse Curriculum

4. Queer Pedagogy and Its Strange Techniques

5. Narcissism of Minor Differences and the Problem of AntiRacist Pedagogy

6. "That Lonely Discovery": Anne Frank, Anna Freud, and the Question of Pedagogy

Notes

Bibliography

Index

About the Author:

Deborah P. Britzman is Associate Professor of Education, Social and Political Thought, and Women's Studies at York University. She is author of Practice Makes Practice: A Critical Study of Learning to Teach, also published by SUNY Press.

Caversham Booksellers
98 Harbord St, Toronto, ON M5S 1G6 Canada
(click for map and directions)
All prices in $cdn
Copyright 2004

Phone toll-free (800) 361-6120
Tel (416) 944-0962 | Fax (416) 944-0963
E-mail info@cavershambooksellers.com
Store hours : 9-6 M-W / 9-7 Th-F / 10-6 Sat / 12-5 Sun EST

search
related events
'Trauma, Repetition, Affect, Negotiation: Paul Rus
Genders Now, Gender Then, and a Thought on Sex: TI
IFPE Members
TBA, TICP upcoming workshop
TICP Members' Publications
authors
Britzman, Deborah P
other lists
Canadian Authors
Canadian Authors in Psychoanalysis
Print-on-Demand Titles
Psychoanalysis
SUNY Press
Toronto Authors
Toronto authors in psychoanalysis