"This edited volume, drawing on subjects such as philosophy, art history, and pedagogy, makes an extraordinarily original and significant contribution to our understanding of the current post-climate era. By reimagining sustainability and addressing the troubling future of rising global temperatures and social injustice, it explores the intersection of art, education, and philosophy across all chapters. This fusion inspires creativity, not only in the world at large but also in how universities can foster a hopeful and inclusive community, nurturing a future rooted in belonging and shared purpose." Peter Dobers, Professor, School of Scienecs, University, Sweden "Säfström and Loughran reveal a world which we are invited to navigate with even more freedom than we can muster. They do so through the diverse spheres of a sophistic(al) heterodoxy--indeed what they call a "patchwork ontology", which allows us to move beyond the strictures that have become the mainstay of our current polity. Being in the world anew is what, one hopes, would allow us to survive the destructive legalities by which human agency became a reified mirage. This is a fascinating book which does not simply challenge our certainties, but confirms, yet again, that the only way to make sense of and prevail in such a world, is to embrace form's pedagogical possibilities." John Baldacchino, Professor of Art and Education, The University of Wisconsin-Madison "An extraordinarily fine collection of authors carries the world events of pedagogy into the realm of thinking otherwise to invite the risk of beauty in our time of ecological crisis.
Each chapter is a gem of engagement and provides a treasure-trove of educational experiments crafted from the ethics of thinking again. On o?er is a new vocabulary as openings to imagination, hospitality, and involvement, with the request to analyze one's own situation within the learning world of others. With the medium for philosophical thought and pedagogical responsiveness, readers enter movements of wonder with fresh thinking, surprising metaphors, and views of life that welcome the coming education." Deborah P. Britzman, author of When History Returns: Psychoanalytic Quests for Humane Learning.