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Feeling Power: Emotions and Education

Contributor(s): Boler, Megan (Author)

ISBN: 9780415921046

Publisher: Routledge

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Pub Date: February 24, 1999

Dewey: 370.153

LCCN: 98-27448

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: 18 to 18

Physical Info: 0.79" H x 9.01" L x 6.06" W ( 0.96 lbs) 268 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Review Quotes:

"Feeling Power is a bold and provocative book whose breadth of inquiry is stunning...Boler takes the reader on a wide-ranging interdisciplinary exploration... This book is both exciting and useful. It is a helpful resource for those of us who keep looking for better pedagogies to address ethical dilemmas in our college and university classrooms. And it is a wonderful book for anyone fascinated by the politics of emotions and by their role in ethical reasoning." -- Hypatia, Barbara Houston
"This book makes a fundamental contribution to feminist theory. Feeling Power gives rare insight into the politics of emotion in education. Boler is passionate about centering emotion in our understanding of intelligence and social action." -- Donna Haraway, author of Modest Witness@Second Millenium.FemaleMan MeetsOncoMouse: Feminism and Technoscience
"This book argues for the need to situate the often isolated and isolating work we do in education in a historical and political framework - one that accounts for class, economic, and power relationships that we both identify with and are identified within. . . Boler ruptures the 'absent presence' of emotions in our professional lives; that is, she dares to move emotion away from the terrain of the unspeakable and into the territory of the spoken, considered, and hence 'knowable.'. . .Feeling Power is a text that promises discomfort, and might very well move us from complacency to action, from slumber to consciousness. . . For its power to unsettle the commonplaces of thought, for its power to cause us to recognize discomfort as a starting point of critique, we should all commend the author of Feeling Power" --Jennifer Driscoll (Univ. of Wisconsin - Milwaukee) for JAC, Vol. 20.3 (2000)."
"Feeling Power is a groundbreaking work that strikes a mortal blow against the separation of reason and emotion that has defined our thinking about the role emotions play in our lives. Boler's impressive and historically-informed study provides powerful new directions for thinking about emotions in relation to social control, education, and resistance." -- Sandra Lee Bartky, author of Femininity and Domination: Studies inthe Phenomenology of Oppression
"Feeling Power is a wide-ranging, thought provoking and stimulating analysis of an important and little-examined nexus: the place of emotion in cognition, power and pedagogy." -- Ruth Frankenberg, author of White Women, Race Matters: The Social Construction of Whiteness

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