Synopses & Reviews
This collection of articles explores how a wide range of academics-- diverse in location, rank and discipline-- understand and express how they deal with spirituality in their professional lives and how they integrate spirituality in teaching, research, administration, and advising. The contributors also analyze the culture of academia and its challenges to the spiritual development of those involved. Twenty chapter authors--from a variety of faith traditions--discuss the ways in which their own beliefs have affected their journeys through higher education. By using an autoethnographic, self-analytical lens, this collection shows how various spiritualities have influenced how higher education is understood, taught and performed. The book will stimulate debate and conversations on a topic traditionally ignored in academia
Review
"Two important currents of thought wend their way through the pages of this captivating book. The first is the fresh movement of spirituality that is bound neither by systematic religion nor by positivist modernity. The second is the analysis of socio-cultural meanings of self (i.e. the situated self). Together, they "inspirit" the reader to apply analyses similar to those of the authors. Reading this book caused me to stretch."
- David R. Black, President, Eastern University
Review
"Scholar/teacher/activists representing a diversity of faith traditions employ the personal revelatory power of autoethnography to document their life journeys and milestones. I was in awe about how these authors blended personal faith and professional commitment to boldly interrogate and transform not only their own belief systems, but also institutional hegemonic structures. The result is a profound analysis of what it means to be intellectually, spiritually and socially conscious in education and the world. Providing numerous examples of the kind of work that makes pedagogic practice a sacred activity, we are led to an educational justice model that holds promise to transform American higher education. All faculty who seek diverse forms of engagement in the scholarship of teaching, activism and spirituality must read this book."
- Laura I. Rendon, Professor, University of Texas-San Antonio; author of Sentipensante (Sensing/Thinking) Pedagogy: Educating for Wholeness, Social Justice and Liberation, Stylus Press
Review
"Chang and Boyd’s text on spirituality in higher education is a timely, courageous, and honest contribution to understanding the multi-dimensions of academic life. Including a range of religious and spiritual beliefs and traditions among faculty in a variety of academic disciplines, this work provides probing and insightful autoethnographic accounts of how faculty integrate spirituality into their lives and identities, teaching, research, and service to the university and community. Pairing an autoethnographic approach with examining personal beliefs in the context of the “soul” of higher education, these authors invite readers to open their minds and hearts to the experience of spirituality in their and others’ academic lives. Those who acknowledge the role of spirituality in their 'call' to the university will find companionship and support in these stories; those who resist connecting spirituality and academia may find themselves pondering the important issues raised by these stories long after they have finished reading them."
-Carolyn Ellis, University of South Florida
Review
"Here is diverse and compelling collection of stories whose authors do something rare in academic life—they turn the tools of inquiry on themselves, exploring how their own spiritual journeys have shaped their teaching and scholarship. Long ago, Socrates warned that "The unexamined life is not worth living." But seldom do we take his words seriously, even in the academy, which is devoted to examining things. This book should encourage all of us to probe the roots of our own work. The stories you are about to read clearly reveal the value of doing so."
—Parker J. Palmer, author of The Courage to Teach, A Hidden Wholeness, Let Your Life Speak and Healing the Heart of Democracy
Synopsis
This collection investigates, through an autoethnographic lens, the roles and intersections of self, spirituality and academia.
About the Author
"Two important currents of thought wend their way through the pages of this captivating book. The first is the fresh movement of spirituality that is bound neither by systematic religion nor by positivist modernity. The second is the analysis of socio-cultural meanings of self (i.e. the situated self). Together, they "inspirit" the reader to apply analyses similar to those of the authors. Reading this book caused me to stretch."
- David R. Black, President, Eastern University
"Scholar/teacher/activists representing a diversity of faith traditions employ the personal revelatory power of autoethnography to document their life journeys and milestones. I was in awe about how these authors blended personal faith and professional commitment to boldly interrogate and transform not only their own belief systems, but also institutional hegemonic structures. The result is a profound analysis of what it means to be intellectually, spiritually and socially conscious in education and the world. Providing numerous examples of the kind of work that makes pedagogic practice a sacred activity, we are led to an educational justice model that holds promise to transform American higher education. All faculty who seek diverse forms of engagement in the scholarship of teaching, activism and spirituality must read this book."
- Laura I. Rendon, Professor, University of Texas-San Antonio; author of Sentipensante (Sensing/Thinking) Pedagogy: Educating for Wholeness, Social Justice and Liberation, Stylus Press
"Chang and Boyd’s text on spirituality in higher education is a timely, courageous, and honest contribution to understanding the multi-dimensions of academic life. Including a range of religious and spiritual beliefs and traditions among faculty in a variety of academic disciplines, this work provides probing and insightful autoethnographic accounts of how faculty integrate spirituality into their lives and identities, teaching, research, and service to the university and community. Pairing an autoethnographic approach with examining personal beliefs in the context of the “soul” of higher education, these authors invite readers to open their minds and hearts to the experience of spirituality in their and others’ academic lives. Those who acknowledge the role of spirituality in their 'call' to the university will find companionship and support in these stories; those who resist connecting spirituality and academia may find themselves pondering the important issues raised by these stories long after they have finished reading them."
-Carolyn Ellis, University of South Florida
"Here is diverse and compelling collection of stories whose authors do something rare in academic life—they turn the tools of inquiry on themselves, exploring how their own spiritual journeys have shaped their teaching and scholarship. Long ago, Socrates warned that "The unexamined life is not worth living." But seldom do we take his words seriously, even in the academy, which is devoted to examining things. This book should encourage all of us to probe the roots of our own work. The stories you are about to read clearly reveal the value of doing so."
—Parker J. Palmer, author of The Courage to Teach, A Hidden Wholeness, Let Your Life Speak and Healing the Heart of Democracy
Table of Contents
Introduction/PrefaceChapter 1 Autoethnography as a Method of Spirituality Research (Heewon Chang)PART 1: Exploring Spirituality in PersonhoodChapter 2 Continuing Construction of a Belief System: Developing Spirituality through Educational and Practical Experience (Lee Nabb)Chapter 3 Weaving Activism, Faith and Scholarship (Drick Boyd)Chapter 4 Past-imperfect: Transformation through a Pedagogy of Love (Janice K. Jones)PART 2: Integrating Spirituality in InstructionChapter 5 Using Scholarly Personal Narrative Writing to Explore Religion and Spirituality in the Lives of Quarterlife Students (Robert Nash)Chapter 6 Crossing Boundaries of Sacredness (Claude F. Jacobs)Chapter 7 Exploring Spirituality Through the Lens of a Learning Community (Al Fuertes)Chapter 8 Letting this Mind be in You: Writing and Teaching Personal Story (Joyce Munro)Chapter 9 Zen Baptist (Erlene Grise-Owens)PART 3: Infusing Spirituality with WorkChapter 10 The Making of a Justice-Oriented Minister Sociologist in Elite Higher Education (John H. Stanfield, II)Chapter 11 Walking the Tightrope: Extending Justice and Mercy in the Assessment and Evaluation of Student Work (Kathy-Ann Hernandez)Chapter 12 Finding "Esprit De Core": Exploring Spirituality in a Faculty & Professional Learning Community (Eileen OShea, Roben Torosyan, Tracey Robert , Ingeborg E. Haug, & Betsy A. Bowen)PART 4: Feeling the Soul of Higher EducationChapter 13 Everything That Lives Wants to Fly: Assimilation, Faith, and Self in Higher Education (Sally Galman)Chapter 14 And Yet It Does Move: Epistemological Tension— The Life of a Pious Academic (Howard Walter)Chapter 15 By a Crooked Star: From Zetetic to Advocate (Ruth Anna Abigail)Chapter 16 Explorations on Scholarship and Spirituality: Autoethnography on Person-Organization Fit (Faith Ngunjiri)