Description

Book Synopsis

In 1971, priest, theologian, and philosopher Ivan Illich wrote Deschooling Society, a plea to liberate education from schooling and to separate schooling from the state. On the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of its publication, Ivan Illich Fifty Years Later looks at the theological roots of Illich’s thought and the intellectual and ideological strands that contributed to his ideas.

Guided by the central question of how Illich reached the point of writing Deschooling Society, the book sheds light on how Illich produced a critique of schooling that can be defined by its eclecticism. Bruno-Jofré and Igelmo Zaldívar explore how this controversial book was framed by Illich’s early neo-scholastic and anti-modern foundation, his discovery of St. Thomas through Jacques Maritain, and the existential turning points that influenced his public life and intellectual direction in moving from a critique of the Church as institution to a critique of s

Table of Contents
Foreword Introduction 1. Ivan Illich: From the Dalmatian Coast, through Vienna, to Rome (1926–1951) 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 3. CIDOC as an Independent Intellectual Hub and the Conflict with the Church 4. Completing the Journey to Deschooling Society: A Radical Critique of Schooling 5. Going Back to Deschooling Society Index

Ivan Illich Fifty Years Later

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    A Hardback by Rosa Bruno-Jofré, Jon Igelmo Zaldívar

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      Publisher: University of Toronto Press
      Publication Date: 06/10/2022
      ISBN13: 9781487545062, 978-1487545062
      ISBN10: 1487545061

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In 1971, priest, theologian, and philosopher Ivan Illich wrote Deschooling Society, a plea to liberate education from schooling and to separate schooling from the state. On the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of its publication, Ivan Illich Fifty Years Later looks at the theological roots of Illich’s thought and the intellectual and ideological strands that contributed to his ideas.

      Guided by the central question of how Illich reached the point of writing Deschooling Society, the book sheds light on how Illich produced a critique of schooling that can be defined by its eclecticism. Bruno-Jofré and Igelmo Zaldívar explore how this controversial book was framed by Illich’s early neo-scholastic and anti-modern foundation, his discovery of St. Thomas through Jacques Maritain, and the existential turning points that influenced his public life and intellectual direction in moving from a critique of the Church as institution to a critique of s

      Table of Contents
      Foreword Introduction 1. Ivan Illich: From the Dalmatian Coast, through Vienna, to Rome (1926–1951) 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 3. CIDOC as an Independent Intellectual Hub and the Conflict with the Church 4. Completing the Journey to Deschooling Society: A Radical Critique of Schooling 5. Going Back to Deschooling Society Index

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