1st Edition
Artist-Teacher Practice and the Expectation of an Aesthetic Life Creative Being in the Neoliberal Classroom
Introduction: Imagining new orientations for researching artist-teacher practice in neoliberal spaces through the inspiration of new materialisms and new pragmatisms
Part 1: Classroom ways-of-being
Introduction to Part 1
Turn 1: Artist-teacher practice, site-responsiveness and the classroom as aesthetic movement
Turn 2: Artist-teacher practice and creative, transformative, therapeutic objects in the classroom
Turn 3: Artist-teacher practice, becoming the ideal teacher and the disorientation of classroom subjects
Part 2: Being less-than
Introduction to Part 2
Turn 4: Reading about knowledge with Bourdieu and Bernstein: Artist-teacher practice, School Art and powerful knowing
Turn 5: Reading about creativity with Deleuze and Foucault: Artist-teacher practice, neoliberalism and the impossible ideal
Part 3: Becoming more than…
Introduction to Part 3
Turn 6: Reading Rancière and Dewey with Jane Bennet: Reconfiguring the politics of the classroom through artist-teacher practice as a third-thing
Turn 7: The gendering of artist-teacher practice: Nurturing the expectation of an aesthetic life through third-site encounters
Conclusion: Sharing responsibility for a life lived aesthetically with art and design education
Biography
Carol Wild is Senior Lecturer in Art and Design Education and Subject Leader for the PGCE Art and Design at the Institute of Education, University College London. She was previously Programme Leader for the Artist Teacher Scheme and MA Arts and Education Practices at Birmingham City University.
I am delighted to see the publication of Artist-Teacher-Practice and the Expectation of an Aesthetic Life. This book, with its excellent combination of sophisticated theory and frontline ethnographic research, makes a vitally important contribution to research into the concept and practices of the artist-teacher movement. The author has a strong personal grounding in the classroom as an artist teacher herself that has enabled her to make this powerful analysis of the movement in context.
Jeff Adams, Emeritus Professor of Education, University of Chester; Fellow of the National Society for Education in Art and Design.






