University of Toronto Press
Ivan Illich Fifty Years Later
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Rosa Bruno-Jofré
and Jon Igelmo Zaldivar
About this book
Ivan Illich Fifty Years Later introduces the reader to the process that led to the writing of one of the most controversial and well-known books that indicted schooling, not only as an institution but as an ethos.
Author / Editor information
Rosa Bruno-Jofré is a professor in the Faculty of Education cross-appointed to the Department of History at Queen's University.
Zaldivar Jon Igelmo :
Jon Igelmo Zaldívar is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education at the Complutense University of Madrid.
Reviews
"Rosa Bruno-Jofré and Jon Igelmo ZaldÍvar offer an account of the intellectual journey of Ivan Illich leading up to his pathbreaking book, Deschooling Society, in 1971. The themes of that book seem prescient: a critique of the monopoly of the nation-state over education; an implicit call for vouchers or other forms of school choice; and most suggestively, the growing capacity of persons to learn outside the boundaries of schooling – what he called ‘Learning Webs,’ long before anyone thought about the internet or social media. Illich’s radical critique is still interesting, still relevant today."
Thomas O'Donoghue, Emeritus Professor of Education, University of Western Australia:
"This is an outstanding work by a number of the foremost authorities in the field. It does immense justice to the essential and perennial aspects of Freire and Illich’s thoughts on schooling. Moreover, presenting the exposition in relation to how their ideas unfolded within various contexts constitutes not only a sound work in the history of education ideas in its own right but also acts as a terrific heuristic device for making the work accessible not only to specialists but also to general educated readers on the matters investigated."
Marc Depaepe, Former president of the International Standing Conference for the History of Education (ISCHE):
"Ivan Illich has undoubtedly earned a place in the canon of great educational thinkers. Unfortunately, his Deschooling Society is currently often regarded as a cause of the alleged decline in the quality of schools. The excellent study Ivan Illich Fifty Years Later has the great merit of placing things in their historical and biographical context. It is to the credit of the authors that, in contrast to the mainstream of educational research, they have enrolled in the rich traditions of cultural-historical reflection to find out what schooling ultimately means to society."
Judith Harford, Professor in the School of Education, University College Dublin:
"Based on authentic, convincing, and impressive primary sources, the scholarship in Ivan Illich Fifty Years Later provides the foundation for a sound and compelling argument. There is a wide, diverse audience for this book including students and scholars in the fields of history, comparative history, philosophy, social and political science, and comparative education. The accessible, engaging style in which the book is written also transcends these areas and spills over into a wider lay audience."
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Illustrations
ix -
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Acknowledgments
xi -
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Foreword
xiii -
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Introduction
1 -
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1 Ivan Illich: From the Dalmatian Coast, through Vienna, to Rome (1926–1951)
10 -
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2 Beyond a Unilinear Development of Illich’s Thinking: An Inquiry into Temporal Layers of Thought Forming His Critical View of the Church and the School
37 -
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3 CIDOC as an Independent Intellectual Hub and the Conflict with the Church
78 -
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4 Completing the Journey to Deschooling Society: A Radical Critique of Schooling
99 -
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5 Going Back to Deschooling Society
129 -
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Index
145