Description
What can we learn from this great thinker as we face challenges such as widespread drudgery and disaffection, estrangement among individuals and groups, and a crisis of democracy? This book supplies the answers, offering a bold new account of Dewey as an educational theorist who is essential for our troubled times.
Revealing the true scope of Dewey's educational vision, this book provides a new perspective on a neglected aspect of the philosophical tradition. Growing People presents an alternative canon-running from Plato to Rousseau to Du Bois-that recasts philosophy in terms of education and, in so doing, opens new pathways for social critique and the liberation of human potential.
About the Author
Natalia Rogach Alexander is a lecturer in philosophy at Columbia University.
Reviews
A definitive study. -- Philip Kitcher, John Dewey Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Columbia University
Reading Dewey alongside Plato, Rousseau, and Du Bois, Alexander has written an original and timely account of Dewey's philosophy of education, placing his character-centered analysis of human flourishing at the core of his aesthetics and political theory. As democratic citizens, we still need to be grappling with Dewey's thought, and Alexander brilliantly helps us see why. -- Robert Gooding-Williams, author of Democracy and Beauty: The Political Aesthetics of W.E.B. Du Bois
A remarkable achievement in resurrecting one of the great thinkers in American history. Dewey is not forgotten-worse, he is not taken seriously, thought to be old-fashioned, even naively benign. Alexander brings us a revitalized Dewey whose vision is as deep as it is broad. Her profound and bold analysis of Dewey's oeuvre couldn't be more contemporary or more relevant. -- Stuart Firestein, author of Ignorance: How It Drives Science
Alexander's philosophically rich and nuanced interpretation shows that Dewey's philosophy of education is a central component of his pragmatism. Alexander makes a compelling case for the idea that Dewey's concern to "set free and develop" human capacities shapes his views on democracy, aesthetics, and even the tasks of philosophy. -- Michele M. Moody-Adams, author of Making Space for Justice: Social Movements, Collective Imagination and Political Hope
Book Information
ISBN 9780231221894
Author Natalia Rogach Alexander
Format Hardback
Page Count 232
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press