This book is about boys’ experiences of being educated in independent single-sex schools in Canada. These experiences, which are oftentimes attributed to particular places and moments at school, reveal ways in which school places are both "companionable" and "influential" in how boys become available to themselves and others as they pursue the possibility of becoming somebody. Curious about how masculinities show up in places at school and studying the sorts of gendered subjectivities that such places invite, entice, support and deny, the book extends beyond traditional ways of thinking and writing about the production of masculinities in education by introducing a different set of conceptual orientations and inquiry practices, including post-masculinities, weak theory, and art-led research and thought practices.
Dónal O'Donoghue is Professor of Art Education in the Department of Curriculum and Pedagogy at The University of British Columbia, Canada.
Part I: Learning to Live in Boys’ Schools: Coming to the Study1. Studying Boys’ Educational Experiences: An Introduction2. Reading Andrew D. Cohen’s Essay, Boys SchoolPart II: Approaching Gender Research from an Art-Led Research Perspective3. The Promise of Aesthetics 4. The Promise of Photography5. The Promise of the Curatorial6. The Promise of Weak TheoryPart III: Learning to Live in Boys’ Schools: Stories that Boys Tell About Themselves and Others7. On Giving an Account 8. Stories that Boys Tell at Preston Hall School for Boys9. Stories that Boys Tell at Redmayne College10. Concluding ThoughtsReferences
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