• Cambridge Scholars Publishing

    "[Engaging Art: Essays and Interviews from Around the Globe is a] collection of astonishing scope, Roslyn Bernstein delves into archives, exhibits, the built environment, and the lively characters who create them. She keenly engages the creativity that enriches, probes, and inspires the world."

    - Alisa Solomon, Columbia University, USA

Thinking and Practicing Reconciliation: Teaching and Learning through Literary Responses to Conflict

Thinking and Practicing Reconciliation asserts that literary representations of conflict offer important insights into processes of resolution and practices of reconciliation, and that it is crucial to bring these debates into the post-secondary classroom. The essays collected here aim to help teachers think deeply about the ways in which we can productively integrate literature on/as reconciliation into our curricula. Until recently, scholarship on teaching and learning in higher education has not been widely accepted as equal to research in other fields. This volume seeks to establish that serious analysis of pedagogical practices is not only a worthy and legitimate academic pursuit, but also that it is crucial to our professional development as researcher-educators.

The essays in this volume take seriously both the academic study of literature dealing with the aftermath of gross human-rights violations and the teaching of this literature. The current generation of college-aged students is deeply affected by the proximity of violence in our global world. This collection recognizes educators’ responsibility to enable future generations to analyze conflict – whether local or global – and participate in constructive discourses of resolution.

Ultimately, Thinking and Practicing Reconciliation charts a course from theory to practice and offers new perspectives on the very human endeavor of storytelling as a way to address human-rights injustices. In their focus on pedagogical strategies and frameworks, the essays in this volume also demonstrate that, as educators, our engagement with students can indeed produce practices of reconciliation that start in the classroom and move beyond it.


Leo W. Riegert Jr. is Assistant Professor of German at Kenyon College. His work on nineteenth-century German-Jewish literature has appeared in The German Quarterly and transversal – Zeitschrift des Centrums für jüdische Studien.

Jill Scott is Vice-Provost Teaching and Learning and Professor in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures at Queen's University, Kingston, Canada. She is the author of Electra after Freud: Myth and Culture (Cornell University Press, 2005) and A Poetics of Forgiveness (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).

Jack Shuler is Associate Professor of English at Denison University. He is author of Calling Out Liberty: The Stono Slave Rebellion and the Universal Struggle for Human Rights (Mississippi University Press, 2009) and Blood and Bone: Truth and Reconciliation in a Southern Town (University of South Carolina University Press, 2012).

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Buy This Book

ISBN: 1-4438-5048-9

ISBN13: 978-1-4438-5048-3

Release Date: 14th November 2013

Pages: 280

Price: £44.99

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