Kenny, Colm (2017) Venture in/between ethics, education and literary media: making cases for dialogic communities of ethical enquiry. PhD thesis, Dublin City University.
Abstract
The thesis contends that education and literary studies can make a valuable contribution to ethics and ethical development of persons, their relations with others and with the world. It promotes an approach to ethics education through dialogic enquiry based on theories and practices associated with comparative literature and philosophical enquiry. These involve students sharing experiences and meanings as they participate in interpretive communities and communities of philosophical enquiry.
There are two main components to the research: ethically focused studies of literary texts and the design, implementation and evaluation of a module in Ethics Education using literature and film as stimuli for Dialogic Enquiry. The literary analyses are influenced by reader-response theory. While recognizing the importance of the author or the contexts of production and receptions of texts, reader-response theory focuses on the experience of the reader as she/he responds to literary texts, and on her/his role in actively co-authoring the meaning of texts. Readers may form or join interpretive communities that share an ethos of practice. The literary narrative fictions studied include fairy tale, contemporary European cinema and neo-Western crime drama, each of which offers a valuable way of thinking about education. The module in ethics education, designed for Transition Year students (generally 15-16 years of age), is based on movements in Philosophy with Children (PwC). Students formulate and explore ethical questions raised in response to themes or issues of literary texts. Dialogic communities of ethical inquiry may emerge from this. Students, participating in these dialogic communities of ethical inquiry, get to test out and develop their moral sense, understood in terms of reason, feeling, memory and imagination. The literary analyses demonstrate the ethically educative promise of literary texts, and the responses of students to this course and the growth of their ethical engagement suggest that this is a promising approach to ethics education. Such an educational experience may be ethical in matter, theory and practice and continue to find expression as praxis beyond the covers of books and walls of classrooms.
Metadata
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
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Date of Award: | November 2017 |
Refereed: | No |
Supervisor(s): | Le Juez, Brigitte and Lorenzi, Francesca |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Comparative Literature; Ethics |
Subjects: | Social Sciences > Education Social Sciences > Teaching Humanities > Philosophy Humanities > Literature Humanities > Film studies |
DCU Faculties and Centres: | DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Science > School of Applied Language and Intercultural Studies |
Use License: | This item is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. View License |
ID Code: | 22009 |
Deposited On: | 09 Nov 2017 13:50 by Brigitte Le Juez . Last Modified 14 Aug 2020 11:06 |
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