Fred Dervin is Professor of Multicultural Education at the University ofHelsinki, Finland and Distinguished and Visiting Professor at different universities around the world. Dervin has written extensively about interculturality in (teacher) education, proposing to systematise the use of critical and reflexive perspectives.
Mei Yuan is Associate Professor at the School of Education, Minzu University of China. Yuan has led many research projects on Minzu and intercultural education and is recipient of many awards for her contributions to ‘minority’ education.
Sude is Professor at the School of Education, Minzu University of China. His research interests include multicultural education, diversity in teacher education and intercultural competence in superdiverse institutions and he is considered as one of the most influential scholars in the field of Chinese Minzu education.
Ning Chen is Lecturer at Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts (China) and Visiting Scholar at the Faculty of Educational Sciences of the University of Helsinki, Finland. Chen specialises in diversity in higher education.
“In producing this remarkable book, Dervin, Yuan, Sude and Chen —interculturality scholars of unparalleled standing — offer their readers far more than their highly learned insights. The emergence of this work is in itself a master-class in demonstrating how Western and Chinese scholars working together can achieve authentic interculturality. Through unwrapping a Chinese approach, the authors revitalized the subject and showcased a complemented and significant way of doing interculturality. The urgently needed book comes at the very time when intercultural communications recurrently deteriorate (e.g. a waning relationship between China and the West). Dervin and his team, once again blaze a new trail. By continuing to challenge the Western-centric epistemic practices, this work offers much needed balance to the debate over the ‘imposed’ and largely one-sided construction and production of knowledge about China. This truly collegial contribution demonstrates respect for and enactment of intellectual equality of Western and non-Western knowledge thereby gifting readers access to a genuinely global form of research and education on interculturality.” (Jinghe Han, Professor, Western Sydney University, Australia)
“How can we make interculturality more intercultural? The authors of this analytically rigorous, genuinely global book give Chinese stories of interculturality a strong voice. The book challenges and further develops the field, giving readers the opportunity to witness and be inspired by alternative views on interculturality unfolding through the authors’ collaboration.” (Petra Daryai-Hansen, Associate Professor, University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
“With this book, Yuan, Dervin, Sude and Chen make a major contribution to intercultural scholarship. Investing in the power of 'Chinese stories of interculturality' they urge us to look elsewhere for inspiration while looking at ourselves. As a specialist of Chinese culture, I am touched by the authors' generosity in sharing these important storiesto the world in an honest and reflexive manner. I congratulate them on this achievement and wish the reader a rewarding experience of 'change and exchange'.” (Man Meng, Professor, Minzu University of China)
“This is a fascinating book that will make a difference in the field of global and intercultural education. The authors have done meticulous work to identify elements of the ‘Chinese stories of interculturality’ and to present them in a clear and stimulating language to international readers, who will get to learn about important aspects of China from the past and today, especially in the way the Middle Kingdom has engaged with interculturality. More importantly, readers are given the opportunity to review their own ways of thinking about this thorny but central notion of today’s world. The book itself represents an excellent example of what interculturality should be about: Scholars from China and Finland have spent quality time together, discussing and negotiating (again and again) the meanings of concepts, notions, theories, inspired by China, in order to enrich global educational scholarship. A worthy feat and an example to follow!” (Gu Mingyuan, Professor, Beijing Normal University (China) and China Education Association)
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Fred Dervin is Professor of Multicultural Education at the University of Helsinki, Finland and Distinguished and Visiting Professor at different universities around the world. Dervin has written extensively about interculturality in (teacher) education, proposing to systematise the use of critical and reflexive perspectives.
Sude is Professor at the School of Education, Minzu University of China. His research interests include multicultural education, diversity in teacher education and intercultural competence in superdiverse institutions and he is considered as one of the most influential scholars in the field of Chinese Minzu education.
Ning Chen is Lecturer at Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts (China) and Visiting Scholar at the Faculty of Educational Sciences of the University of Helsinki, Finland. Chen specialises in diversity in higher education.