Teaching and learning with Canadian art students in North Iceland: towards the Posthuman

This article presents a reflective consideration of the author’s design and implementation of the Iceland Field School for Concordia University (Montreal, Canada), describing her desire to bring her teaching, research and art-making practices in line with her posthuman values. Named “Imagining Icela...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kathleen Vaughan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Aberdeen, School of Education 2019
Subjects:
edu
art
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26203/0gtn-hb27
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:c953680cddc34113848eb05be7e3c7b3 2023-05-15T16:42:45+02:00 Teaching and learning with Canadian art students in North Iceland: towards the Posthuman Kathleen Vaughan 2019-12-01 https://doi.org/10.26203/0gtn-hb27 en other eng University of Aberdeen, School of Education 0424-5512 2398-0184 https://doi.org/10.26203/0gtn-hb27 undefined Education in the North, Vol 26, Iss 1, Pp 6-25 (2019) field schools iceland research-creation artist residencies arts-oriented teaching edu art Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2019 fttriple https://doi.org/10.26203/0gtn-hb27 2023-01-22T19:05:26Z This article presents a reflective consideration of the author’s design and implementation of the Iceland Field School for Concordia University (Montreal, Canada), describing her desire to bring her teaching, research and art-making practices in line with her posthuman values. Named “Imagining Iceland,” this course provided 13 senior undergraduate and graduate students with the opportunity to spend the month of June 2016 in the small north Iceland community of Blönduós, making art according to their individual practices. The course aimed to support both the professionalization of the students’ artistic practices and their engagement with the particularities of Iceland as an ethically complicated place to visit, learn and make art, touching on environmental and posthumanist themes. Offering a case study of the Iceland Field School, the text articulates the problems and contradictions the author finds in implementing her posthuman values in her teaching, and offers four examples of student work for consideration as to whether their artmaking and experiential learning begins to connect them to the world around, dismantling humanist hierarchies. The author ends with short list of questions that will guide her future work and that may be of value to others striving to implement arts-oriented teaching in the north. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Unknown Canada Blönduós ENVELOPE(-20.281,-20.281,65.659,65.659)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic field schools
iceland
research-creation
artist residencies
arts-oriented teaching
edu
art
spellingShingle field schools
iceland
research-creation
artist residencies
arts-oriented teaching
edu
art
Kathleen Vaughan
Teaching and learning with Canadian art students in North Iceland: towards the Posthuman
topic_facet field schools
iceland
research-creation
artist residencies
arts-oriented teaching
edu
art
description This article presents a reflective consideration of the author’s design and implementation of the Iceland Field School for Concordia University (Montreal, Canada), describing her desire to bring her teaching, research and art-making practices in line with her posthuman values. Named “Imagining Iceland,” this course provided 13 senior undergraduate and graduate students with the opportunity to spend the month of June 2016 in the small north Iceland community of Blönduós, making art according to their individual practices. The course aimed to support both the professionalization of the students’ artistic practices and their engagement with the particularities of Iceland as an ethically complicated place to visit, learn and make art, touching on environmental and posthumanist themes. Offering a case study of the Iceland Field School, the text articulates the problems and contradictions the author finds in implementing her posthuman values in her teaching, and offers four examples of student work for consideration as to whether their artmaking and experiential learning begins to connect them to the world around, dismantling humanist hierarchies. The author ends with short list of questions that will guide her future work and that may be of value to others striving to implement arts-oriented teaching in the north.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kathleen Vaughan
author_facet Kathleen Vaughan
author_sort Kathleen Vaughan
title Teaching and learning with Canadian art students in North Iceland: towards the Posthuman
title_short Teaching and learning with Canadian art students in North Iceland: towards the Posthuman
title_full Teaching and learning with Canadian art students in North Iceland: towards the Posthuman
title_fullStr Teaching and learning with Canadian art students in North Iceland: towards the Posthuman
title_full_unstemmed Teaching and learning with Canadian art students in North Iceland: towards the Posthuman
title_sort teaching and learning with canadian art students in north iceland: towards the posthuman
publisher University of Aberdeen, School of Education
publishDate 2019
url https://doi.org/10.26203/0gtn-hb27
long_lat ENVELOPE(-20.281,-20.281,65.659,65.659)
geographic Canada
Blönduós
geographic_facet Canada
Blönduós
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Education in the North, Vol 26, Iss 1, Pp 6-25 (2019)
op_relation 0424-5512
2398-0184
https://doi.org/10.26203/0gtn-hb27
op_rights undefined
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26203/0gtn-hb27
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