This article draws from John Dewey’s philosophy of education, ideas about democracy and pragmatist assumptions to explain how his articles for The New Republic functioned pedagogically. Taking media as a mode of public pedagogy, and drawing extensively from Dewey’s Democracy and Education, as well as from his book The Public and its Problems, the article explores the relationships between communication, education and democracy using the expanded conceptions of all the aforementioned advanced by Dewey. Borrowing insights from Randolph Bourne, who used Dewey’s own ideas to criticize his mentor’s influence on intellectuals who supported US involvement in World War I, the analysis explores the contradictions within Dewey’s public pedagogy. The ...
Journalist Walter Lippmann and philosopher John Dewey engaged in an extended dialogue in the 1 920s ...
This article argues that conceptions of community after Dewey despair of an institutional means of r...
In 20th century's European theory of education there was little interest in philosophy ofdemocracy. ...
This article draws from John Dewey's philosophy of education, ideas about democracy and pragmatist a...
This article draws from John Dewey’s philosophy of education, ideas about democracy and pragmatist a...
This essay takes the present “post truth” threat to democratic politics as an occasion to revisit Jo...
This essay takes the present “post truth” threat to democratic politics as an occasion to revisit Jo...
This article aims to critically assess John Dewey’s ideal of “democracy as a way of life”, an evocat...
This article aims to establish a line of continuity between John Dewey's democratic and educational ...
In his books Public Opinion and The Phantom Public, Walter Lippmann argued that policy leaders shoul...
John Dewey's Experience and education has as much to say about pedagogy today as when it was first p...
The present sociopolitical environment in the United States is perpetually mediated and beset with i...
This article provides a close reading of Democracy and Education,situated in the context of Dewey\u2...
Dewey published his article “Education and Social Change” in 1937. His preoccupation with this issue...
This essay takes the present “post truth” threat to democratic politics as an occasion to revisit Jo...
Journalist Walter Lippmann and philosopher John Dewey engaged in an extended dialogue in the 1 920s ...
This article argues that conceptions of community after Dewey despair of an institutional means of r...
In 20th century's European theory of education there was little interest in philosophy ofdemocracy. ...
This article draws from John Dewey's philosophy of education, ideas about democracy and pragmatist a...
This article draws from John Dewey’s philosophy of education, ideas about democracy and pragmatist a...
This essay takes the present “post truth” threat to democratic politics as an occasion to revisit Jo...
This essay takes the present “post truth” threat to democratic politics as an occasion to revisit Jo...
This article aims to critically assess John Dewey’s ideal of “democracy as a way of life”, an evocat...
This article aims to establish a line of continuity between John Dewey's democratic and educational ...
In his books Public Opinion and The Phantom Public, Walter Lippmann argued that policy leaders shoul...
John Dewey's Experience and education has as much to say about pedagogy today as when it was first p...
The present sociopolitical environment in the United States is perpetually mediated and beset with i...
This article provides a close reading of Democracy and Education,situated in the context of Dewey\u2...
Dewey published his article “Education and Social Change” in 1937. His preoccupation with this issue...
This essay takes the present “post truth” threat to democratic politics as an occasion to revisit Jo...
Journalist Walter Lippmann and philosopher John Dewey engaged in an extended dialogue in the 1 920s ...
This article argues that conceptions of community after Dewey despair of an institutional means of r...
In 20th century's European theory of education there was little interest in philosophy ofdemocracy. ...