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(DOWNLOAD) "Community, Unity, Identity, Multiplicity, And Diversity: Are They Compatible?" by Journal of Thought # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

Community, Unity, Identity, Multiplicity, And Diversity: Are They Compatible?

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eBook details

  • Title: Community, Unity, Identity, Multiplicity, And Diversity: Are They Compatible?
  • Author : Journal of Thought
  • Release Date : January 22, 2009
  • Genre: Education,Books,Professional & Technical,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 177 KB

Description

Delivered in Philadelphia during the United States' 2008 presidential campaign, the then presidential nominee, Barack Obama's history-making Race and Unity Speech (1) encapsulated a social and spiritual paradox that is, ironically, sometimes forgotten within academic arenas. Referring to his own family's diverse origins and experiences, he noted the reality that "this nation is more than the sum of its parts--that out of many, we are truly one." The idea that unity coexists with and emerges from a multiplicity of perspectives is not new within academia, but it is intensely radical, in that it asks us to swim against the seemingly instinctive--albeit reactionary--tides of professional territorialism. Similar to Deweyan ideas of growth, President Obama's speech implied that effective problem solving is a dynamic process. Continued growth requires openness to change; securing individual freedom necessitates risk taking on behalf of others. To lose sight of these paradoxical realities is to gradually become myopic. Within higher education this can mean that courses and research, which were once valued for their potential to aid our communities, are eventually reduced to professional currency hoarded for purposes of territorial safeguarding. Colleagues are objectified as we conveniently embrace an artificial separation of the professional and the personal in order to "send messages" to our academic communities or to remake work environments within our own images. A "world" or two might be gained by a narrow commitment to the promotion of self and territory, but at what cost? Academic freedom, which is the cornerstone of meaningful research and education, cannot survive, much less thrive, unless academic communities are committed to making room for multiple viewpoints and ways of knowing. Regardless of the illusions of security and control that we create when new or differing paradigms are temporarily constrained or silenced, our connectedness to "the other" is ever present. The question, then, rests in whether we will honor this connectedness and grow in positive ways, or whether we will deny, ignore or fight it, only to stagnate within partial realities.


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