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  1.  29
    Improvisation in the disorders of desire: performativity, passion and moral education.Ian Munday - 2010 - Ethics and Education 5 (3):281 - 297.
    In this article, I attempt to bring some colour to a discussion of fraught topics in education. Though the scenes and stories (from education and elsewhere) that feature here deal with racism, the discussion aims to say something to such topics more generally. The philosophers whose work I draw on here are Stanley Cavell and Judith Butler. Both Butler and Cavell develop (or depart from) J.L. Austin's theory of the performative utterance. Butler, following Derrida, argues that in concentrating on the (...)
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  2.  15
    A Creative Education for the Day after Tomorrow.Ian Munday - 2016 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 50 (1):49-61.
    This paper considers the claims representatives of the ‘creativity movement’ make in regards to change and the future. This will particularly focus on the role that the arts are supposed to play in responding to industrial imperatives for the 21st century. It is argued that the compressed vision of the future offered by creativity experts succumbs to the nihilism so often described by Nietzsche. The second part of the paper draws on Stanley Cavell's chapter ‘Philosophy the Day After Tomorrow’ to (...)
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  3. Language, Teaching, and Failure.Ian Munday - 2016 - In Amanda Fulford & Naomi Hodgson (eds.), Philosophy and Theory in Educational Research: Writing in the Margin. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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