Full Description
The collapse of civilization, the end of the world as we know it, has long been a cultural imaginary, but has rarely been as topical as it is today. Beyond the phantasmagoria of violence, depression and despair, the conviction of being doomed has always been a challenge to imagine a new, post-apocalyptic world, be it utopian or dystopian. Beyond questions of immediate survival, there is a growing concern about how to educate humanity for a new life after the end of this world. In this volume, the editors, Michael A. Peters and Thomas Meier, renowned scholars of educational and apocalyptic studies, have brought together 31 contributions that offer a diversity of perspectives on such post-apocalyptic education, from abstract philosophical reflections to applied studies, from historical and political analyses of how we got into the current situation of global devastation to decolonial perspectives and essayistic explorations.
Contents
Michael A Peters & Thomas Meier: Civilizational Collapse and the Philosophy of Post-Apocalyptical Survival - An Introduction - Collapse - Petar Jandrić: Apocalypse: Postdigital Readings and Response - Ruth Irwin: The Transcendental Aesthetic as Simulacrum: Truth, Preppers, and the End of the World as we Know It - João José R.L. de Almeida: Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations and the civilizational collapse - Babette Babich: Günther Anders' Apocalypse Blindness and the Post-Apocalyptic - Paulo Ghiraldelli: Machinic subjectivity - Peter McLaren: Surplus Fascism and the Post-Digital Apocalypse in the Age of Anti-Woke Terrorism - Decolonial - Marianna Papastephanou: The Cosmopolitics of Apocalyptic Thought - Antonio Miguel, Carolina Tamayo & Elizabeth Gomes Souza: The fifth horseman of the apocalypse - Makere Stewart-Harawira & Georgina Tuari Stewart: Māori in the Post-Apocalypse - Adrian Hermann: Adventures from the Rubble: The (Post-)Apocalypse as a Mode of Play in Tabletop Role-Playing Games - Ecology - David A. Turner: Living at the Edge of Chaos - Benjamin Green: Ecological Civilization: Engaging the complexity of ecological crisis - Greg William Misiaszek: Without a Possible Vaccine, Ecopedagogical Paradigm Shift Vital to Avoid Ecological Collapse - Zhou Guowen & Cai Xinyi: Reflections on environmental ethics of boundary and domain -- Based on the Taoist View of nature - Maryam Dezhamhooy & Leila Papoli-Yazdi: Margins with the central role: an archaeology of living with toxics and pollution - Education - Trevor Norris: Education, the Far Future, and the End of Times - Arjen E.J. Wals: Earth centered - an invitation to relational transgressive learning as a counter-hegemonic force in times of systemic global dysfunction - Michael Jopling & Peter Bennett: Is this the promised end? Low end theory, education and the illusion of survival - Yi Chen & Boris Steipe: Cultivating Knowledge: The Anti-Apocalyptic Potential of Bildung - Yusef Waghid: (African) University Education Discourse in a Crisis: On the Brink of Collapse? - Change - Steve Fuller: An education for end times - Sharon Rider: Where Do We Stand? (Or How to Do Something in Particular) - Marek Tesar, Andrew Madjar & Adriano De Francesco: Future Horizons: Doing Pedagogy at the Edge of Chaos - Holger Hestermeyer: International law and cooperation in times of crises - Actualities - Shail Mayaram: The Nation as Lament: The Sars Corona in India and the Reshaping of the Social and the Political - Michael A. Peters: Xi's Global Civilization Initiative - Henry A. Giroux:Mass Shootings in the Age of the Apocalypse: Politics and the Ghosts of History - Thomas Meier & Michael A. Peters: Never-ending ends: Present, past and future - a postscript - Notes on the contributors