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Autor principal: Mukherjee, Mousumi
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1248007
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author Mukherjee, Mousumi
author_facet Mukherjee, Mousumi
Mukherjee, Mousumi
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Tagore's "Rooted-Cosmopolitanism" and International Mindedness against Institutional Sustainability Mukherjee, Mousumi Global Approach International Education Asian Culture Educational Philosophy Foreign Policy Self Concept Ethnicity Ethics Cultural Context Cultural Awareness Archives Barriers Educational Change Personality Traits Biographies Teaching Methods Foreign Countries Cosmopolitanism is often seen as a western concept associated with liberal individualistic values. It is also associated mostly with the urban educated middle-class. However, cosmopolitan thinking has been also prevalent in the East. Scholars in the twenty-first century are increasingly arguing that, there are multiple ways of thinking about cosmopolitanism originating from different regions of the world. Among Eastern thinkers, Rabindranath Tagore from colonial British India has been considered by many as one of the most cosmopolitan thinkers. The uniqueness about Tagore's cosmopolitanism is that, it did not uproot him from his rural Bengali roots and sense of ethnic identity. He was very much a "rooted-cosmopolitan". In his book, 'Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a world of strangers', Kwame Anthony Appaiah had argued that, a "rooted cosmopolitan" is someone who was rooted in his own cultural context while having an open-mind to feel literally at home in the world. This article draws on archival research at Rabindra Bhawan in Shantiniketan and University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Library archives to further this argument and demonstrates how Tagore's school and university were built drawing on his "rooted cosmopolitan" ideals and international mindedness. In conclusion, this article highlights some of the challenges of sustaining the reformist educational institutions led by Tagore's unique personality traits, social and pedagogic reform movements in the nineteenth century and early twentieth century colonial British India.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1248007
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2020
record_format eric
spellingShingle Tagore's "Rooted-Cosmopolitanism" and International Mindedness against Institutional Sustainability
Mukherjee, Mousumi
Global Approach
International Education
Asian Culture
Educational Philosophy
Foreign Policy
Self Concept
Ethnicity
Ethics
Cultural Context
Cultural Awareness
Archives
Barriers
Educational Change
Personality Traits
Biographies
Teaching Methods
Foreign Countries
Tagore's "Rooted-Cosmopolitanism" and International Mindedness against Institutional Sustainability Mukherjee, Mousumi Global Approach International Education Asian Culture Educational Philosophy Foreign Policy Self Concept Ethnicity Ethics Cultural Context Cultural Awareness Archives Barriers Educational Change Personality Traits Biographies Teaching Methods Foreign Countries Cosmopolitanism is often seen as a western concept associated with liberal individualistic values. It is also associated mostly with the urban educated middle-class. However, cosmopolitan thinking has been also prevalent in the East. Scholars in the twenty-first century are increasingly arguing that, there are multiple ways of thinking about cosmopolitanism originating from different regions of the world. Among Eastern thinkers, Rabindranath Tagore from colonial British India has been considered by many as one of the most cosmopolitan thinkers. The uniqueness about Tagore's cosmopolitanism is that, it did not uproot him from his rural Bengali roots and sense of ethnic identity. He was very much a "rooted-cosmopolitan". In his book, 'Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a world of strangers', Kwame Anthony Appaiah had argued that, a "rooted cosmopolitan" is someone who was rooted in his own cultural context while having an open-mind to feel literally at home in the world. This article draws on archival research at Rabindra Bhawan in Shantiniketan and University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Library archives to further this argument and demonstrates how Tagore's school and university were built drawing on his "rooted cosmopolitan" ideals and international mindedness. In conclusion, this article highlights some of the challenges of sustaining the reformist educational institutions led by Tagore's unique personality traits, social and pedagogic reform movements in the nineteenth century and early twentieth century colonial British India.
title Tagore's "Rooted-Cosmopolitanism" and International Mindedness against Institutional Sustainability
topic Global Approach
International Education
Asian Culture
Educational Philosophy
Foreign Policy
Self Concept
Ethnicity
Ethics
Cultural Context
Cultural Awareness
Archives
Barriers
Educational Change
Personality Traits
Biographies
Teaching Methods
Foreign Countries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1248007