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Kierkegaard on Dialogical Education : Vulnerable Freedom - Anna Strelis Soderquist

Kierkegaard on Dialogical Education

Vulnerable Freedom

By: Anna Strelis Soderquist

eText | 14 July 2016 | Edition Number 1

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Kierkegaard on Dialogical Education: Vulnerable Freedom examines a unique conception of freedom that underscores the productive role of human vulnerability, as found in the work of Søren Kierkegaard. Anna Strelis Söderquist uncovers Kierkegaard’s method of “indirect communication” as a formative and dialogical approach to education that guides a person in becoming not only free and independent, but also receptive and empathetic. This approach bestows upon a human being the dignity that comes from being both capable and humble. It emphasizes the need for trust and courage alike in our dialogical relations, freeing us to receive and respond to the other both in our need and through our own choosing. Freedom’s secret is that it is at the same time self-empowered and vulnerable, self-giving and receptive, independent and dependent.

Kierkegaard’s method, in both form and content, hinges upon the narrativity of human experience. No human being is immune to the seductive force of stories. Kierkegaard recognizes the power of a story to captivate and to change us, to empower and to humble us, and he makes use of them as formative teachers with whom we enter into dialogue. Through its examination of indirect formation in Kierkegaard through poetry and storytelling, Kierkegaard on Dialogical Education explores the reaches and limits of narrative imagination and inquires into the dialogical and narrative struggle inherent in the formation of identity.

This book will be of interest to philosophers and educators, as well as those who meet at the crossroads of philosophy, education, and art.
Industry Reviews
Though not concentrated in any particular text, Kierkegaard’s writings are rife with
reflections on the philosophy of education. In a book as rigorously argued as it is creative,
Anna Strelis Söderquist deftly presents Kierkegaard as educator, but much more than that,
she generates beguiling possibilities for applying Kierkegaard’s pedagogical prescriptions.
Kierkegaard was hard to please, but I am sure that this is one interpretation of his work that
he would have smiled upon.
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