“This is a brilliant book, which I enjoyed reading and would highly recommend to anyone interested in finding alternatives to neoliberal curricula and humanist educational agendas. This book exemplifies that each intra-action with humans, nonhumans, and other-than-human matters … . With the invitation to read non-linearly … this is a book to read again and again knowing no two readings will be the same.” (Mary Catherine Garland, Journal of Education for Teaching JET, April 14, 2024)“This book is an ideal entry point for reading groups who are interested in slowing down to intra-act … with/along agential realism, posthumanism (and the posthuman condition), and (new) feminist materialism/s. … Reading groups and scholars engaging with this book might particularly be interested in further experimenting and theorising Murris’ plea for de/colonisation by adopting the diffractive methodology in teaching, learning, assessment, and education research.” (Petro du Preez, CriSTaL - Critical Studies in Teaching & Learning, Vol. 11 (1), 2023)“A significant contribution to engagement with, and understanding of, Barad’s agential realism. … Murris’ book invites the reader in and provides possibilities and opportunities for participating in an agential realist approach to teaching and learning. … Karen Barad as educator: Agential realism and education engages with this undertaking, and also reconsiders and reconfigures teaching and learning in the process. I forone will be rereading Murris’ book, with each reading no doubt co-generating different patterns of understanding.” (Shae L. Brown, Australian Journal of Environmental Education, November 28, 2022)