Critical Posthumanism and Education

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A01=Kay Sidebottom
affect
affirmative ethics
anti-fascist pedaogies and curriculum
assemblages
Author_Kay Sidebottom
Category=JNA
Category=QD
Category=YPJL
critical posthumanism
decolonial pedagogy
deleuze and guattari
education
epistemic violence
eq_bestseller
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forthcoming
minoritarian
new materialism
posthuman education
posthumanism
rhizome
social justice

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350526402
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Offering a bold reimagining of what education can and must become in complex, precarious times, Critical Posthumanism and Education dismantles familiar binaries – mind/body, human/nature, teacher/learner – to reimagine education for the 21st century.

Drawing on a lineage of philosophers from Spinoza, Deleuze and Guattari to Rosi Braidotti, Kay Sidebottom combines critical pedagogy, feminist new materialism, Indigenous epistemologies, and posthuman ethics to expose how modern schooling remains entangled in Eurocentric humanism, cognitive reductionism, and neoliberal control. In resistance to this, she demonstrates how educators can cultivate creative openings, joyful solidarities, and “lines of flight” even within restrictive systems, engaging concepts from the rhizome to nomadic leadership.

Each chapter weaves philosophy together with lived stories, research-creation practices, and practical provocations, showing how teachers, students, materials, technologies, animals, and environments co-produce learning. Readers encounter educators working otherwise: mapping their own power lines, experimenting with art-making, noticing the agency of objects, attending to atmospheres, and embracing difference as generative.

Ultimately the book argues for a posthuman education that is non-linear, embodied, decolonial, ecological, and rooted in ethical responsibility – one that connects the micro-politics of the classroom to planetary futures. In an age of accelerating climate crisis, intense datafication, and profound social inequality, Sidebottom urges us to rethink what counts as knowledge, who gets to be considered human, and how we might create educational spaces capable of transformation.

Kay Sidebottom is Lecturer in Education at the University of Stirling, UK. She is a guest tutor on the annual Posthuman Summer School at the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, and is currently editing a special issue of Cultural and Pedagogical Inquiry on posthuman education with the University of Alberta, Canada.

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