This book makes an important contribution to ongoing debates about the
epistemological, ethical, ontological and political implications of
relational ethics in higher education. By furthering theoretical
developments on the ethics of care and critical posthumanism, it speaks
to contemporary concerns for more socially just possibilities and
enriched understandings of higher education pedagogies.
The book considers how the political ethics of care and posthuman/new
feminist materialist ethics can be diffracted through each other and how
this can have value for thinking about higher education pedagogies. It
includes ideas on ethics which push those boundaries that have
previously served educational researchers and proposes new ways of
conceptualising relational ethics. Chapters consider the entangled
connections of the linguistic, social, material, ethical, political and
biological in relation to higher education pedagogies.
This topical and transdisciplinary book will be of great interest for
academics, researchers and postgraduate students in the fields of
posthuman and care ethics, social justice in education, higher
education, and educational theory and policy.