The Palgrave Handbook of Embodiment and Learning Edited by Anja Kraus · Christoph Wulf The Palgrave Handbook of Embodiment and Learning “In the Anthropocene, a time when the fate of the planet is determined largely by humans, it has become difficult to differentiate between nature and culture. There is hardly any nature remaining that has not been impacted by humans. In view of this, the body - the place where nature and culture meet - is becoming increasingly impor- tant for human identity, our understanding of humanity and the processes by which we live and learn. In our bodies, nature and culture are inextricably interwoven. The body is a clear manifestation of what all human beings have in common, what is dif- ferent because of culture and what is individual and unique. This is why processes of embodiment and learning are so important both for society and the individual. In the cultural and social sciences, and also in the natural, technological and life sciences, this insight is now widely accepted. This handbook contains contributions by schol- ars from a variety of academic backgrounds who use different scientific paradigms to examine diverse processes of embodiment and learning. Main references are theoreti- cal and empirical approaches of philosophy, historical anthropology and cultural or social anthropology. In the processes of embodiment and learning, the senses, the emotions and practical knowledge come into their own. Education is seen as the development of the whole person. The handbook makes an important contribution especially to the advancement of educational practice.” Anja Kraus • Christoph Wulf Editors The Palgrave Handbook of Embodiment and Learning Editors Anja Kraus Christoph Wulf Department of Teaching and Learning Anthropology and Education (Ämnesdidaktik) Freie Universität Berlin Stockholms universitet Berlin, Germany Stockholm, Sweden ISBN 978-3-030-93000-4 ISBN 978-3-030-93001-1 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-93001-1 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2022 This work is subject to copyright. 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The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland Contents Introduction: Embodiment—A Challenge for Learning and Education 1 Anja Kraus and Christoph Wulf Part I Philosophical and Historical Underpinnings 19 Promoting Embodiment Through Education in the Anthropocene 23 Renaud Hétier and Nathanaël Wallenhorst Embodiment Through Mimetic Learning 39 Christoph Wulf Awareness as a Challenge: Learning Through Our Bodies on a Planet in Crisis 61 Mariagrazia Portera Building Blocks of a Historical Overview of ‘Tacit Knowledge’ 75 Kristina Brümmer, Thomas Alkemeyer, and Robert Mitchell The Antinomies of Pedagogy and Aporias of Embodiment: A Historical and Phenomenological Investigation 91 Norm Friesen v vi Contents Embodied Cognition: A Methodological and Pedagogical Interpretation 107 Christian Rittelmeyer Part II The Pedagogical Relationship and Professionalism 129 Knowledge of Pathos 133 Shoko Suzuki Pedagogical Tact: Reconstruction of a Bodily Moment of the Pedagogical Relationship 145 Anja Kraus and Thomas Senkbeil Gestures in the Classroom 163 Regula Fankhauser and Angela Kaspar Vulnerability: A Basic Concept of Pedagogical Anthropology 179 Daniel Burghardt and Jörg Zirfas Pedagogical Relationships as Relationships of Power 193 Kathrin Audehm Part III Body, Sociality and Learning 209 The Performativity of Learning 213 Birgit Althans The Embodied Other: Mimetic-Empathic Encorporations 229 Léonard Loew The Embodiment of Gender in Childhood 245 Anja Tervooren The Adult-Child Co-existence: Asymmetry, Emotions, Upbringing 259 Tatiana Shchyttsova Contents vii Alterity and Emotions: Heterogeneous Learning Conditions and Embodiment 277 Anja Kraus Part IV Body, Space and Learning 291 Movement and Touch: Why Bodies Matter 295 Gabriele Klein Like Water Between One’s Hands: Embodiment of Time and the Ephemeral of Dance 311 Gabriele Brandstetter Materiality and Spatiality of Bodily Learning 325 Arnd-Michael Nohl and Morvarid Götz-Dehnavi Body-Related Learning Processes in Museums 341 Bernd Wagner Part V Body, Virtual Reality and Mindfulness 355 Technical Mediation of Children’s Onlife Worlds 357 Michalis Kontopodis and Kristiina Kumpulainen Creative and Artistic Learning in Post- digital Youth Culture: Results of a Qualitative Study on Transformations of Aesthetic Practices 367 Benjamin Jörissen, Martha Karoline Schröder, and Anna Carnap Mind the Body: Mindfulness Meditation as a Spiritual Practice Between Neuroscience, Therapy and Self-awareness 383 Andreas Nehring Part VI Classroom Practices 403 The Role of Bodily Experience for Learning Designs 407 Staffan Selander viii Contents Mathematics Learning: Structured Ways of Moving With 419 Nathalie Sinclair and Eva Jablonka Social Choreographies in Primary School Education 437 Cornelie Dietrich and Valerie Riepe On the (In)Visibility of Postcolonial Subjectivation: Educational Videography Research in Glocalised Classrooms 457 Juliane Engel and Cristina Diz Muñoz Music as an Embodied Learning Experience 479 Tiago de Oliveira Pinto Part VII Bodies in Times of Glocalizations 501 Embodiment of the Values System in Indigenous African Society 505 Michael Omolewa and Adetola Adejo Embodiment in Education in the Islamic World 519 Reza Arjmand The Body in Education: Conceptions and Dimensions in Brazil and Latin America 541 Karina Limonta Vieira Cultivating a Gentle Body: A Chinese Perspective 561 Hongyan Chen The Body and the Possibility of an Ethical Experience of Education: A Perspective from South Asia 577 Srajana Kaikini Notes on Contributors Adetola Adejo is an assistant lecturer and a PhD student in the Department of History and International Studies at Babcock University, Nigeria. Her research interests focus on food politics, food security and climate change with reference to their impact on states’ relations. Thomas Alkemeyer is Professor of Sociology and Sociology of Sport at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Germany. His main research interests are sociological theories of practice, sociology of the body and of sport, subjectivation research and cultural analysis of the present. Birgit Althans received her doctorate in 1998 with “Der Klatsch, die Frauen und das Sprechen bei der Arbeit” (Campus 2000). From 2000 to 2008 she was a research assistant to Prof. Christoph Wulf at the Free University of Berlin in the Department of Anthropology and Education/General Pedagogy and in the Sonderforschungsbereich (SFB) “Cultures of the Performative”. In 2005 she received Habilitation with “Masked Desire. Female Social Reformers between Social Work and Management” (Campus 2007) from the Freie Universität (FU) Berlin. Since 2018 she is Professor of Pedagogy at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. Her research interests include pedagogical and historical anthropology, gender and cultural studies, early management his- tory and organisational theory and qualitative methods. Reza Arjmand is Associate Professor of Education at Linnæus University, Sweden. He has written extensively on Islamic education and everyday life of Muslims. His recent publications include “Sexuality and Concealment among Iranian Young Women” (Sexualities, 2019); “Ephemeral Space Sanctification and Trespassing Gender Boundaries in a Muslim City” (Storia Urbana, 2019); ix x Notes on Contributors Handbook of Islamic Education (2018) and Public Urban Space, Gender and Segregation: Women-Only Urban Parks in Iran (2017). Kathrin Audehm is Professor of Pedagogy with a focus on education and heterogeneity at the University of Cologne, Germany. Her main areas of work are ethnographical and theoretical research on performative practices, on authority and power relations in the field of education, the interferences between socialization and habitualization and gender constructions in popu- lar culture. Gabriele Brandstetter is Professor of Theatre and Dance Studies at Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, Director of the Center of Movement Studies (ZfB) and Co-director of the International Research Center “Interweaving Performance Cultures”. Her research focus is on history and aesthetics of dance from the eighteenth century until today; theatre and dance of the avant-garde; contemporary theatre and dance, performance, theatricality and gender differences; and concepts of body, movement and image. Kristina Brümmer is a research assistant in the working group “Sociology and the Sociology of Sports” of the Institute of Sport Science at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Germany. Her research focuses on pro- cesses of subjectivation, coordination and learning in high-performance team sport. She works with sociological theories of practice, knowledge, technology and the body as well as methods from qualitative social research (especially ethnography, videography and interviews). Daniel Burghardt is a Professor of Educational Science with a focus on inequality and social education at the University Innsbruck, Austria. His main areas of work are pedagogical anthropology, pedagogical theory of space and critical pedagogy. Anna Carnap is an education researcher and a lecturer at the Friedrich- Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg and the Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany. Her research interest is dedicated to the intertwining relation of situated practice, the visible and the sayable, society and its change. Her researches had yet taken place in the fields of school, social media and gender. Hongyan Chen is an associate professor at the Institute of International and Comparative Education, East China Normal University, China, and Director of the Intercultural Education and Communication Research Center. She obtained her PhD from the Free University of Berlin, Germany. She is the principal investigator of the National Project “Educational Ritual and the