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The Contested Space of Animals in Education: A Response to the Animal Turn in Education for Sustainable Development

Journal

EDUCATION SCIENCES
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/educsci9030211

Keywords

education for sustainable development; animals; posthumanism; anthropocentrism; more-than-human; critical animal pedagogies

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The so-called animal turn, having been on the agenda for around 15 years in the humanities and social sciences, is gaining force also in the educational sciences, typically with an orientation toward posthumanist ontologies. One particular space where educational more-than-human relations are debated is the field of education for sustainable development (ESD). This paper responds to two recent contributions to this debate, both positioned within ESD frameworks. The purpose of this response is two-fold: First, to give a critical account of the knowledge claims of the two articles, their overlaps and divergences, as well as their implications for pedagogical practice and their potential consequences for the position of animals in education and in society at large. The meaning and usefulness of analytic tools such as critical pluralism and immanent critique in relation to animals in education is discussed, as well as whose realities are represented in ESD, revealing contested spaces of teaching and learning manifested through an enlightened distance to anthropocentrism in-between compliance and change. The second purpose is to sketch a foundation of reflective practice for critical animal pedagogies, offering a critical theory-based form of resistance against recent posthumanist configurations of the animal question in education and beyond.

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