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Cristina Cammarano

Salisbury University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    9
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    2

 More details
  • Salisbury University
    Department of Philosophy
    Associate Professor
Salisbury, Maryland, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy, Misc
Other Academic Areas
Areas of Interest
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy, Misc
Other Academic Areas
  • All publications (9)
  •  55
    Philosophical Considerations on Teacher Presence
    Philosophy of Education 71 424-431. 2015.
  •  17
    I Know, You Know, We Know: Recognition and Misrecognition as Possibilities for Education in the Example of Kara Walker’s Art
    The Journal of Aesthetic Education 49 (2): 107-116. 2015.
  •  46
    On Philosophizing as Education
    Precollege Philosophy and Public Practice 3 5-20. 2021.
    In my article I offer an argument in favor of philosophy as a practical activity that is intrinsically educative. In responding to the crisis of our discipline, I make a case for a beneficial relationship between philosophy and the community, especially from the point of view of the discipline itself. I propose that the practicality of philosophy needs to be experienced in concrete activities involving others, therefore recasting the relation of theory to practice in the modality of translation …Read more
    In my article I offer an argument in favor of philosophy as a practical activity that is intrinsically educative. In responding to the crisis of our discipline, I make a case for a beneficial relationship between philosophy and the community, especially from the point of view of the discipline itself. I propose that the practicality of philosophy needs to be experienced in concrete activities involving others, therefore recasting the relation of theory to practice in the modality of translation as a never-completed task to take on. I suggest that philosophizing could be characterized by a position of vulnerability, which complicates notions of inside/outside, belonging, home, and dialogue. I offer examples drawn from my experience of integrating philosophical discussion with children in my college courses to suggest that philosophizing with others in varied contexts should be an integral part of education. By emphasizing the benefits accruing to undergraduate students and to the discipline itself from the practice, I do not intend to downplay or marginalize the voices and experiences of the children and teachers who are such an essential part of the practice. Rather than being a zero-sum game, the engagement of philosophy with the world expands and lifts the experience of everybody involved.
  • Katzi Txumu'n : creating a curriculum of Meso-American short stories for philosophical conversations with children and families
    with Kimberly Arriaga-Gonzalez
    In Cara E. Furman & Tomas de Rezende Rocha (eds.), Teachers and philosophy: essays on the contact zone, State University of New York Press. 2025.
    Philosophy of Education
  •  48
    Sweetness Follows
    Philosophy of Education 74 634-645. 2018.
  •  97
    “What Would it Take You to See Me Unbroken”? Insights from María Lugones on Cultivating Loving Perception in Teaching
    Philosophy of Education 78 (1): 1-13. 2022.
    US Latina Feminism
  •  55
    Enjoying the Wood Paths
    Philosophy of Education 73 162-167. 2017.
  •  63
    I Know, You Know, We Know: Recognition and Misrecognition as Possibilities for Education in the Example of Kara Walker's Art
    Journal of Aesthetic Education 49 (2): 107-116. 2015.
    Aesthetics
  •  4
    Literacy as Philosophy: A Review of Teaching from an Ethical Center (review)
    with Stephanie A. Burdick-Shepherd
    Education and Culture 41 (1). 2025.
    Teaching from an Ethical Center is an exploration of literacy as a philosophy, one that recognizes the interconnection of body, mind, and spirit in the reading and comprehension of texts. It is a fluid text that grounds pedagogical wisdom across the undergraduate curriculum, well outside an educational methods class or literacy course. In our review, we focus on chapters 2 and 3 as mediated through our experiences teaching first-year students.
    Philosophy of Education
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