“The utopian mode is to the existence of society what invention is to scientific knowledge. The utopian mode may be defined as the imaginary project of another kind of society, of another reality, another world.” (Ricoeur, 1976, 24)
First used in a book by Thomas More (1516), utopia is commonly defined as an imagined place or state of things in which everything is perfect. The term, based on the Greek ou ‘not’ and topos ‘place’ (= no place), has known multiple interpretations, uses and modifications across time.
By adopting an interdisciplinary approach, this seminar draws on literature, history, sociology, and philosophy in order to uncover the multiple meanings and importance of utopias and utopian thinking applied to the educational sphere. We will have a look at both classical literary and modern utopias in their relationship to education and school. We will then try to identify and analyze together current utopias in education, understood as “(partially) realized utopias” (Ricoeur, 1976). Moreover, examples of utopian, or intentional, communities, utopian pedagogies (Freire, 1972), and progressive education will be addressed throughout the seminar. We will further touch on various terms: “abstract and concrete utopias”, “creative utopia”, “uchronia”, “pathologies of utopia”, “utopias of escape”, “utopias of reconstruction”, “utopian method”, “heterotopia”.
Among others, we will discuss questions such as:
• How ideal education has been seen across the ages?
• How education is configured within the utopian thinking and texts? And what the different forms of utopian expression (books, articles, movies) teach us about the manner in which society is imagined at some point in time?
• Which models of social change are entangled within modern utopian experiments in education? How one can understand educational utopias in countries from the Global South?
• As a particular case study, which relationship could we establish between the contemporary movement towards inclusive education and imaginary rethinking/repairing of society?
The seminar aims:
• to give preliminary knowledge on the literary genre of utopia
• to encourage students engage with the texts we are reading, to better understand their background, and challenge their thinking
• to better understand and analyze modern and contemporary utopian discourses and educational practices as articulations of “spaces of experience” and “horizons of expectations” (Koselleck, 2004).
• to offer students guidance towards critical thinking on present and future alternative practices in education.
The seminar also intends to mobilize previous Bielefeld knowledge resources, as we will have a closer look firstly to the creation of LaborSchule and secondly, to the project of the “History of the Function of Literary Utopias in the Early Modern Period,” conducted from 1980 to 1981 by an international research group at the Center for Interdisciplinary Research (ZiF).
Students will finally gain experience of undertaking preliminary analysis tasks in order to better engage with rigorous research. Multimedia content forms, such as text, audio, images, animations or video, will assist our inquiry about the utopian discourses and practices in education.
In dieser Veranstaltung findet ein Platzvergabeverfahren statt. Bitte informieren Sie sich hier über den Ablauf: http://www.uni-bielefeld.de/erziehungswissenschaft/bie/faq.html
Frequency | Weekday | Time | Format / Place | Period |
---|
Module | Course | Requirements | |
---|---|---|---|
25-BE-IndiErg3_a IndiErg: Bildung und Didaktik | E1: Bildung: Theorien und Institutionen | Study requirement
Ungraded examination |
Student information |
E3: Bildung: Theorien und Institutionen oder Didaktische Modelle und Lernräume | Study requirement
Ungraded examination |
Student information | |
25-BE-IndiErg8_a International Studies in Educational Science | E2: Comparative and/or International Education | Study requirement
|
Student information |
25-BE11 Abschlussmodul | E1: Seminar | Study requirement
|
Student information |
25-BE8 Bildung: Theorien und Institutionen | E2: Theorien und Institutionen | Study requirement
|
Student information |
25-BiWi10 Schulentwicklung und Professionelle Kooperation | E1: Organisations- und Schultheorie | Study requirement
|
Student information |
25-BiWi15_a Bildung, Erziehung und Unterricht (GymGe) | E2: Organisation und Schulentwicklung | Study requirement
Graded examination |
Student information |
25-FS-BE8 Bildung: Theorien und Institutionen | E2: Theorien und Institutionen | Study requirement
Ungraded examination |
Student information |
The binding module descriptions contain further information, including specifications on the "types of assignments" students need to complete. In cases where a module description mentions more than one kind of assignment, the respective member of the teaching staff will decide which task(s) they assign the students.