The pleasure is in pushing myself forward and seeing the things that I set
as defining me and have committed myself to being materialised, realised and
improved. And understanding and putting to rest and at bay the angst,
concern, fears and despair.
This does actually give me pleasure.
A pleasure, like any other human sensation, cannot be isolated, certainly
not from the other sensations. It is integrated in and defined by pain,
frustration, hurt, angst, concerns, hopes and despairs. Human beings are
far more complex than being isolated feelings like pleasure, horror, pain,
despair and hope. We are everything meshed up into an undefined,
self-creating blurr and trying to move forward and fulfil this existence
launched/thrown (Heidegger, 1962) into us.
The melange de genre is something that Shakespeare was devoted to, unlike
the French writers of the time. Freud and Lacan have also shown that love
integrates and constitutes hatred as well.
In my heuristics I define my feelings and Ontology through analysing their
opposites and integrating them in the analysis. I think phenomenologists
have not focused enough in this idea.
Alon
----- Original Message -----
From: "Margarida Dolan" <[log in to unmask]>
To: "alon serper" <[log in to unmask]>
Cc: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, July 15, 2005 9:26 AM
Subject: Re: Additions to our archive of explanations of educational
influences in learning
> Dear Alon,
> You say
>>I shall never indulge you or worse, let you indulge yourself. I shall
>>follow
> everything you write or say with fine comb, shake you very hard, give you
> very
> hard time and continuously demand explanations and clarifications. Just
> as I
> expect you to do with me, even more harshly.<
>
> Alon, I sincerely hope that in doing the above, you will still find some
> time
> left for pleasure in your life!
>
> Dear All,
> I would really have liked to share with you my processes of discovery of
> my
> values, of my practice, and of the pleasure I get from being in roles of
> learning support tutor, staff developer, and chair of a Trust..
>
> However, I feel this is no longer a safe place to share and appreciate.
> Being a
> visual person, when I read some of the emails, I can't stop imagining
> non-verbal
> expressions on the writer's faces. And I don't like what I visualise.
>
> I really hope the list can go back to instilling a sense of security and
> respect, which at the moment I feel isn't happening.
>
> With best regards,
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Margarida Dolan PhD Phone: 0044(0)1225
> 383241
> Learning Support Tutor and Staff Developer Fax: 0044(0)1225
> 386709
> Learning Support Service
> University of Bath
> Claverton Down, Bath BA2 7AY, UK
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> The views and comments expressed in this email are confidential to the
> recipients and should not be passed on to others without permission. This
> email message does not necessarily express the views of the University of
> Bath
> and should be considered personal unless there is a specific statement to
> the
> contrary.
>
> Quoting alon serper <[log in to unmask]>:
>
>> Just checking if Jack is still alive.
>>
>> In respect to you, Jack, I shall never indulge you or worse, let you
>> indulge
>> yourself. I shall follow everything you write or say with fine comb,
>> shake
>> you very hard, give you very hard time and continuously demand
>> explanations
>> and clarifications. Just as I expect you to do with me, even more
>> harshly.
>>
>> Then, I shall draw on it in my own work.
>>
>> I think that if this is the case and Jack is still alive and
>> contributing,
>> then it is our duty to constantly remind him that he has made some good
>> criticism and points that are appealing and intriguing and could and
>> should
>> be pushed forward and develop them and himself. A person should never be
>> permitted to stand still. He/she should be encouraged to push
>> himself/herself forward.
>>
>> I see dismayed as wondering and perplexed, re my last entry.
>> Alon
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Yaqub Paul Murray" <[log in to unmask]>
>> To: <[log in to unmask]>
>> Sent: Thursday, July 14, 2005 2:13 PM
>> Subject: Additions to our archive of explanations of educational
>> influences
>> in learning
>>
>>
>> > Additions to our archive of explanations of educational influences in
>> > learning
>> >
>> > "What I'm hoping is that practitioner-researchers find some of my ideas
>> > about the nature of educational theory helpful as they construct their
>> > own,
>> > just as I draw on the ideas of others." - Jack
>> >
>> > I do find Jack's ideas helpful, and he certainly does draw on my ideas.
>> >
>> > Here is a 'rough guide' take on my experience of working with(-in) the
>> > influence of Jack's ideas.
>> >
>> > Jack has always encouraged me to frist and foremost challenge my own
>> > ideas. My tendency is to challenge the ideas of others in a traditional
>> > academic sense. I have listened to Jack's counsel because of the
>> > authenticity of his own practice with me.
>> >
>> > Do read this amazing evidence, which I corroborate, written by Jack,
>> > that
>> > points to his extensive and intensive willingness to bring his body
>> > into
>> > spaces of challenge and to take the challenge of others, seriously,
>> >
>> > "Closing this chapter on what counts as evidence ion the self-study of
>> > teacher education practices brought to mind a quotation from
>> > A.N.Whitehead
>> > about imagination, as well as the most challenging question I have been
>> > asked as an s-step researcher, by Paul Murray, a former doctoral
>> > student
>> > and a mixed race educator:
>> >
>> > Where is the evidence of the critical engagement with the ideas of
>> > critical
>> > race theorists, critical non-racial theorists and post-colonial
>> > theorists
>> > in
>> > the formation of the identities and practices of individuals you are
>> > working
>> > with? Where is the evidence of your influence in respect of alerting
>> > them
>> > to
>> > enhancing the quality of their work by making themselves familiar with
>> > these
>> > epistemologies? (Why should you/they when they can get their PhD's/do
>> > their
>> > AR writing without making reference to their critical knowledge?
>> > (Murray,
>> > 2003, 3-mail)
>> >
>> > Having doctoral students who ask their supervisors such questions does
>> > not
>> > make for an unreflective life. Yet taking such questions seriously
>> > offers
>> > the possibility that the s-step researcher will be able to look back on
>> > a
>> > life of inquiry (Marshall, 1999) that has focused on living values of
>> > humanity more fully."
>> >
>> > (page 897, Evidence in Self-Studies of Teacher Education Practices, in
>> > Loughran J, Hamilton, M.L., LeBoskey, V.K, and Russell, T. (eds.),
>> > International Handbook of Self-Study of Teaching and Teacher Education
>> > Practices, 2004, Dordrecht: Kluwer).
>> >
>> > As a supervisor and research mentor Jack has been impeccable in
>> > providing
>> > a tweak to my consciousness concerning how I hold my self accountable
>> > for
>> > my live/living thesis from within the logics of my own live and living
>> > thesis.
>> >
>> > It seems to me he has done this by way of example. In this process Jack
>> > has supported the legitimacy of my own way of seeing as a live/living
>> > theory scholar while enabling me to become - gradually!- less defensive
>> > and more (psychologically) honest about the glitches in my thinking,
>> > the
>> > contradictions in my claims to practice, and the sometimes tawdry
>> > nature
>> > of my scarifying. This is Jack's brilliance in his challenging
>> > encounter
>> > with me.
>> >
>> > Because of this encounter I now consciously aim to respond to the
>> > challenges from my own students with that combo of grace and
>> > intellectual
>> > rigour that Jack has shown me in the 'encounter of challenge', and
>> > which
>> > can be aesthetically appreciated through Gabriel Marcel's (1935)
>> > beautiful
>> > way of describing the sort of human availability that was needed to
>> > achieve the right mode of encounter as,
>> >
>> > "a mutual availability for what the future holds in store"
>> >
>> > (p 49, in Emmy Van Deurzen, 1998, Paradox and Passion in Psychotherapy,
>> > Wiley)
>> >
>> > In terms of adding to our archive of explanations et al. What I
>> > recognise
>> > as Jack's impeccable quality as a doctoral-educator from the grounds of
>> > my
>> > experience is his persistent invitation to examine whether the unity of
>> > imagination I sometimes express in my writing has correspondence with
>> > my
>> > experiences in reality. I've been influenced by Jack to internalise
>> > this
>> > standard of judgement, not uncritically and entirely willingly I might
>> > add,
>> > and it has really helped me to take more careful responsibility for the
>> > critical and ethical faculties of authenticity of my research stories.
>> > To
>> > make a shift from rhetoric and polemic, towards placing my insights in
>> > the
>> > ground of edcuational practicalities.
>> >
>> > In developing the art of postcolonial scholarship from a theoretical
>> > backdrop of critical theory (and related critical perspectives) I have
>> > developed a very 'critical eye' in respect of the authority of
>> > scholarship.
>> > Jack has encouraged me to find my own theoretical construction for my
>> > living and live thesis, without doctrinal cramp, or the caprice of a
>> > supervisor's hubris. I have that delight of knowing that I've been
>> > influenced by Jack's educational practice to hold dear to my own
>> > practice
>> > the educational virtue communicated with sublime clarity and elegance
>> > in
>> > the following excerpt,
>> >
>> > "In seeing education as an art, I accept a responsibility for helping
>> > others to give a form to their own lives. Accounts of our own lives as
>> > educators do seem to be intimately related to the lives of those we
>> > teach.
>> > I mean this in the sense that in accounts of our educative relations we
>> > should surely expect our students to speak on their behalf. I believe
>> > my
>> > students do." (page 9, Jack Whitehead, The Growth of Educational
>> > Knowledge: Creating Your Own Living Educational Theories, 1993, Hyde)
>> >
>> > I do!
>> >
>> > Yaqub
>>
>> --
>> I am using the free version of SPAMfighter for private users.
>> It has removed 1 spam emails to date.
>> Paying users do not have this message in their emails.
>> Try www.SPAMfighter.com for free now!
>>
--
I am using the free version of SPAMfighter for private users.
It has removed 1 spam emails to date.
Paying users do not have this message in their emails.
Try www.SPAMfighter.com for free now!
|