Histories, Poetry, Haunting

Auteurs-es

  • Robert Christopher Nellis Red Deer College

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40571

Mots-clés :

poetic inquiry, poetry, hauntology, histories

Résumé

How do histories of this land inform, whisper in the ear and trouble its curricular landscapes? This presentation explores some accounts of pasts, histories and their lingering effects and affects, both in their failures and their unique re-arrivals. What would be some implications of imagining the past, not as a presumably singular, monolithic, universality anchored to a relationship with a presumably static, temporalized subjectivity? What of curricular re-imaginings toward, not Past, but pasts; moreover, pasts that dwell in the footprints laid there, but also refuse to remain there--that keep returning, as revenant? Work informed by Munslow (2010) might suggest that the stories one tells of pasts may be as important as the content of those narratives. The present work moves within a space of considering text, especially creative and poetic work, as offering a modality uniquely attuned to resonances of pasts that are both grounded and fluid. The work imagines a space with enough room for both particularities and their otherwise. It imagines them holding hands in a spectral partnership--conjuring ghosts, if ever unwelcome, nonetheless returning as figures of reminding, offerers of histories, characters of reckoning.

Biographie de l'auteur-e

Robert Christopher Nellis, Red Deer College

Robert Christopher Nellis is a continuous faculty member in the Red Deer College School of Education. He is author of Haunting Inquiry: Classic NFB Documentary, Jacques Derrida, and the Curricular Otherwise and a former co-president of the Canadian Association for Curriculum Studies.

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Publié-e

2020-06-27

Comment citer

Nellis, R. C. (2020). Histories, Poetry, Haunting. La Revue De l’association Canadienne Pour l’étude De Curriculum , 18(1), 143–144. https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40571

Numéro

Rubrique

Re-Searching and Re-Thinking