The ethics of writing : Deconstruction and Pedagogy

Converging on that which pertains to educational theory and philosophy in the corpus of Jacques Derrida, the specificity of detail to be found in its rereading that follows, illustrates, by example, how the textuality-based machinations of deconstruction can offer a profound resistance to the in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Trifonas, Peter Pericles
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/6810
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-6810
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-68102018-01-05T17:33:22Z The ethics of writing : Deconstruction and Pedagogy Trifonas, Peter Pericles Converging on that which pertains to educational theory and philosophy in the corpus of Jacques Derrida, the specificity of detail to be found in its rereading that follows, illustrates, by example, how the textuality-based machinations of deconstruction can offer a profound resistance to the instruments of domination embedded within the methodico-institutional praxeology of teaching-learning. Furthermore, how it can provide an effective manner for undoing the ethical substrata reinforcing the politics of educational theory and practice that suffuse the discursive gradients of concepts such as "freedom," "truth," "reason," or "humanity," and so on with ideological significance. To examine this thematization of the ethico-political focus of deconstruction with respect to issues of educational theory and practice in general, the "philosophico-methodological" approach I take relies, more or less, on an actively interpretative instance of the moment of reading as writing. That is, the "formativity" of the textual production is attuned to the complexity of the thinking-through and working-out, a thinking-workingthrough- out, of the act of meaning-making itself. Respecting the "exigencies" of a classical protocol of reading, the modality of the writing—its philosophical emphasis and style—integrates and establishes associative links to the terms of deconstruction by forcing reflection upon the objectifiable values of the meaning of itself, attempting to come to an understanding of the significance of Derrida's texts for actualizing a positive transformation of the institutional ground of pedagogy. Resisting the telos of decidability at the threshold of its own sense, the study compels "the reader"—as it does "the writer"—to push at the outer limits of their own horizons of knowledge. The "results" of this working through of the Derridean instance of deconstruction are articulated as part of the "ec-centricities" of reading as writing, wherein, the ideas drawn from these texts are turned back upon themselves and "worked-over," thereby, extending the intertextual schematism of the ideological norms and frames of reference within which the psyche operates. What I show through and by example is, how the radical polemics of deconstruction has value for analyzing the ethical and political implications of pedagogical contingencies of theory and practice. Education, Faculty of Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of Graduate 2009-04-03T23:55:47Z 2009-04-03T23:55:47Z 1997 1997-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/6810 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 13311932 bytes application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description Converging on that which pertains to educational theory and philosophy in the corpus of Jacques Derrida, the specificity of detail to be found in its rereading that follows, illustrates, by example, how the textuality-based machinations of deconstruction can offer a profound resistance to the instruments of domination embedded within the methodico-institutional praxeology of teaching-learning. Furthermore, how it can provide an effective manner for undoing the ethical substrata reinforcing the politics of educational theory and practice that suffuse the discursive gradients of concepts such as "freedom," "truth," "reason," or "humanity," and so on with ideological significance. To examine this thematization of the ethico-political focus of deconstruction with respect to issues of educational theory and practice in general, the "philosophico-methodological" approach I take relies, more or less, on an actively interpretative instance of the moment of reading as writing. That is, the "formativity" of the textual production is attuned to the complexity of the thinking-through and working-out, a thinking-workingthrough- out, of the act of meaning-making itself. Respecting the "exigencies" of a classical protocol of reading, the modality of the writing—its philosophical emphasis and style—integrates and establishes associative links to the terms of deconstruction by forcing reflection upon the objectifiable values of the meaning of itself, attempting to come to an understanding of the significance of Derrida's texts for actualizing a positive transformation of the institutional ground of pedagogy. Resisting the telos of decidability at the threshold of its own sense, the study compels "the reader"—as it does "the writer"—to push at the outer limits of their own horizons of knowledge. The "results" of this working through of the Derridean instance of deconstruction are articulated as part of the "ec-centricities" of reading as writing, wherein, the ideas drawn from these texts are turned back upon themselves and "worked-over," thereby, extending the intertextual schematism of the ideological norms and frames of reference within which the psyche operates. What I show through and by example is, how the radical polemics of deconstruction has value for analyzing the ethical and political implications of pedagogical contingencies of theory and practice. === Education, Faculty of === Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of === Graduate
author Trifonas, Peter Pericles
spellingShingle Trifonas, Peter Pericles
The ethics of writing : Deconstruction and Pedagogy
author_facet Trifonas, Peter Pericles
author_sort Trifonas, Peter Pericles
title The ethics of writing : Deconstruction and Pedagogy
title_short The ethics of writing : Deconstruction and Pedagogy
title_full The ethics of writing : Deconstruction and Pedagogy
title_fullStr The ethics of writing : Deconstruction and Pedagogy
title_full_unstemmed The ethics of writing : Deconstruction and Pedagogy
title_sort ethics of writing : deconstruction and pedagogy
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/6810
work_keys_str_mv AT trifonaspeterpericles theethicsofwritingdeconstructionandpedagogy
AT trifonaspeterpericles ethicsofwritingdeconstructionandpedagogy
_version_ 1718587523898277888