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Attuned to Love: Tracing Affective Pathways of Ethical Learning in Wild Pedagogies

  • Design School Kolding, Kolding, Denmark.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

This article contributes to Wild Pedagogies by foregrounding love as an emergent, affective practice that takes shape through embodied, affective encounters with the more-than-human (Whatmore, 2006) and material world. Engaging post-qualitative sensibilities, it approaches walking and writing not as fixed methods, but as entangled, responsive practices that invite ethical attunement to the unfolding rhythms of the living world. While Wild Pedagogies emphasise relationality, they have yet to fully account for affect as a pedagogical force. Addressing this gap, the article traces how love moves through diverse encounters, shaping perception, responsibility, and responsiveness. Love is conceptualised through three interwoven affective pathways: shimmering rupture (moments that unsettle habitual perception), relational resonance (the affective flow that binds beings in co-becoming), and cyclical attunement (the rhythmic deepening of ethical engagement). These pathways reframe love as a material practice of staying-with (Haraway, 2016)—a commitment to returning, noticing, and responding to the world’s ongoing entanglements.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberDOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/aee.2025.32
JournalAustralian Journal of Environmental Education
VolumeVolume 41
Issue numberSpecial Issue 2: Wilding Pedagogies
Pages (from-to)126 - 143
Number of pages17
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2025

Keywords

  • learning, educational science and teaching
  • affective learning
  • co-becoming
  • ecological attunement
  • ethical relationality
  • more-than-human
  • pedagogical love
  • relational ontology
  • wild pedagogies

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