This book is about becoming touched and moved by Karen Barad's agential
realism. Karen Barad as Educator is not biographical. It is not
about Barad. There is much to be learned about teaching and education
research through the human and other-than-human narrative characters in
Barad's writings and way of life. Reading this book is about becoming
entangled with, and being inspired by, a passionate yearning for a
radical reconfiguration of education in all its settings and phases
(e.g., day-care centres, schools, colleges, universities, but also
homes, museums or therapy rooms). This book will appeal to lecturers,
teachers, artists, therapists, parents and grandparents, funders of
education research, organisers of educational events, as well as
detached youth workers. In short, this book will speak to anyone
interested in the 'what' and the 'how' of educational encounters and who
is interested in alternatives to the dominant neoliberal national
curricula, educational policies and humanist teaching, research, and
conference agendas. The book aims to offer a gripping account for
educators to be inspired by the invigorating and elusive philosophy of
agential realism with a specific focus on iterative performative
practices that profoundly matter to what counts as knowledge, teaching,
learning and response-able education science.