The Postsecular Turn in Education: Lessons from the Mindfulness Movement and the Revival of Confucian Academies

Studies in Philosophy and Education 35 (6):551-571 (2016)
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Abstract

It is part of a global trend today that new relationships are being forged between religion and society, between spirituality and materiality, giving rise to announcements that we live in a ‘postsecular’ or ‘desecularized’ world. Taking up two educational movements, the mindfulness movement in the West and the revival of Confucian education in China, this paper examines what and how postsecular orientations and sensibilities penetrate educational discourses and practices in different cultural contexts. We compare the two movements to reveal a new quality of hybrid modernization in that they react, in different ways, to certain pathologies that are identified as consequences of secular modernity. Burnout syndrome, the sense of a spiritual void, but also the loss of a spiritual and cultural identity are being perceived as correlating to a one-sided push towards a modernity that emphasizes secular rationalization over mindfulness and Westernization over cultural particularity. The two case studies mark a critical insight on the present condition and limits of secularism and highlights the ongoing negotiations of values and modes of self-cultivation in schools. In an increasingly pluralistic world, the entanglement of the secular, spiritual, religious and wisdom traditions provides the opportunity to rethink education as a creative realm and an impossible possibility to re-engage the minds and lives of those in the hybrid pedagogical time.

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Mario Wenning
Loyola University Andalusia

Citations of this work

Opposing Bonsais.Mario Wenning - 2021 - Kritike 15 (3):i-i.
The Kowtow and the Eyeball Test.Mario Wenning - 2021 - Kritike 15 (3):13-39.

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References found in this work

Orientalism.Edward W. Said - 1978 - Vintage.
A Secular Age.Charles Taylor - 2007 - Harvard University Press.
Confucian role ethics: a vocabulary.Roger T. Ames - 2011 - Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press.
Orientalism.Peter Gran & Edward Said - 1980 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 100 (3):328.

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