Towards a Theory of Collective Care as Pedagogy in Higher Education

Authors

  • Cory Legassic Dawson College; McGill University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36510/learnland.v17i1.1124

Keywords:

collective care, critical affective pedagogy, affective individualism, affective dissonance, affective solidarity

Abstract

This piece offers a conceptual framework for collective care as pedagogy in higher education, and a proposition of how to theorize its orientations within anticolonial and feminist work on affect in education. First, I spotlight work that helps to define collective care. Next, I call on the concept of affective individualism as a way to describe what is: the taken-for-granted affective governmentality (Zembylas, 2021) that shapes how we often come together in our classrooms. Finally, I ground collective care as pedagogy as the building of affective solidarity, an affective conceptual framework for what could be, grounded in the feminist work of Clare Hemmings (2012).

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Published

2024-07-02

How to Cite

Towards a Theory of Collective Care as Pedagogy in Higher Education. (2024). LEARNing Landscapes, 17(1), 125-142. https://doi.org/10.36510/learnland.v17i1.1124