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Contribution to Book
Wild Honey: Toward a Curriculum of Be(e)comings
Expanding Curriculum Theory: Dis/Positions and Lines of Flight
  • Tricia M. Kress, University of Massachusetts Boston
  • Robert L. Lake, Georgia Southern University
Document Type
Contribution to Book
Publication Date
5-2-2016
ISBN
9781134704439
Abstract

This chapter presents two seemingly disparate topics: school reform and beekeeping. It seeks out rhizomatic connections between two seemingly unlike things, they aim to surface subterranean patterns of Western thinking that underpin 'common-sense' conceptions about curriculum in US public schools. They are inspired by postformalism as described by Thomas and Kincheloe and the poststructuralism of Deleuze and Guattari. The chapter compares seemingly unlike things, following impulses sparked by divergent thinking, and seeking out new ways of knowing, new 'lines of flight', in anticipation that by identifying and troubling epistemological and ontological boundaries of Western thought. Like bees themselves, in this piece, using Deleuze and Guattari's rhizomatics as inspiration, they seek out sources of sustenance and building materials to shift the conversation toward what they are calling here 'wild honey' or a 'curriculum of beecomings'. In order to blur the Cartesian boundaries of knower and known, and provide justification for connecting curriculum to the lived lives of students and teachers.

Citation Information
Tricia M. Kress and Robert L. Lake. "Wild Honey: Toward a Curriculum of Be(e)comings" 2nd EditionNew York, NYExpanding Curriculum Theory: Dis/Positions and Lines of Flight (2016)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tricia-kress/15/