Mythos and Voice

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A01=Charles Underwood
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
agency
anticipatory appropriation
Author_Charles Underwood
automatic-update
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DS
Category=DSBB
Category=JBGB
Category=JFHF
Category=JHMC
cognitive ethnography
COP=United States
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
expansive learning
ideological becoming
Language_English
Mythos
navigation
PA=Available
Price_€20 to €50
PS=Active
relational habitus
social displacement
softlaunch
zone of proximal development

Product details

  • ISBN 9781498534260
  • Weight: 345g
  • Dimensions: 153 x 24917mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This book focuses on mythos and voice in the Odyssey, to illuminate its characters’ journeys from social displacement through discovery and recovery. Mythos and Voice approaches the Odyssey as a narrative of displacement – a narrative that maps the social displacement of its characters, explores the cognitive consequences of that displacement, and embodies the variable strategies by which those characters learn to resolve their displacement. It is a narrative that also employs and elaborates the characters’ own narratives of displacement as genres enabling them to resist externally imposed definitions of their situations and to redefine and ultimately reclaim their own place in the world, not as it was before their displacement, but as it must be, given the new post-heroic world in which they now live.
The focus on mythos and voice enables readers to approach the study of learning and the acquisition of personal agency in the context of a hazardous world – the cultural world that Odysseus navigates in Homer’s epic poem. With this focus, the author examines interactive processes of human learning in a specific cultural context – the epic universe of Homeric narrative. By ethnographically examining the learning contexts portrayed inHomer’s epic, Mythos and Voice elucidates an Archaic Greek view of human learning through examples that show how the author(s) of the Odyssey envisioned and dramatized displacement, learning and agency in the epic work. The book focuses on aspects of Homeric cognition as they cumulatively develop among key characters within the Odyssey’s inventive narrative structure. In this way, Mythos and Voice describes a culturally specific “theory” of learning and development – a perspective that proved compelling in the pre-classical and classical Greek world, even as it does to readers now.

Charles Underwood is executive director of University-Community Links in the Graduate School of Education at the University of California, Berkeley.

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