I relish the opportunity to have lived long enough in the
academy to have seen the spiritual intent embedded within the
voluminous commentaries of historians and sociologists of religions
and the compendia of mytho-ethnographers--Panofsky, Eliade, Campbell
come to mind--actually transformed into the life-breath of educators
in the dailiness of our vocations. Elizabeth J. Tisdell's Exploring
Spirituality and Culture in Adult and Higher Education takes
its rightful place both at the table of conversation and within
the arena of activity focused on culturally relevant education
from the perspectives of spiritual formation, process, and content.
It is not always the easiest conversational ploy to address the
elephant in the room, yet, as Tisdell notes for us, there has
been increasing permission giving for doing just that--speaking
directly to the issue of the simple fact of learners' and educators'
impacted spiritual multi-dimensionalities and the intertwining
of spirituality with meaning and meaning creation. I am of a
generation which was alerted to the articulation of these concerns
by exposure to Paulo Freire; Tisdell to a generation alerted more
perhaps by bell hooks--both are cited, along with the growing
numbers of qualitative researchers, activists, teachers and writers,
as provocative commentators on, and advocates for, the enterprise
of weaving spirituality into the classroom. Although I should
immediately state, as does Tisdell, that the dynamics of spirituality
pre-exist for our educational settings; it is not so much something
we bring to the classroom and curricula, as it is something we
acknowledge as there, and within which we can exercise a repertoire
of sensitive pedagogy.
That Hegel is not mentioned until page 248 is an indication of
how far the conversation has come; our beginning points, as Tisdell
so wonderfully iterates, are within our immediate teaching experiences,
and not within a deliberation of manifestations of spirit. Prior
to teaching/learning moments themselves are those cultural experiences
adults bring into the pattern of their lived lives marked as spiritual
referents. Tisdell is very honest, I suggest, in paralleling
her defining characteristics of spirituality with her own formative
story.
Story, in fact, permeates this book, and is a necessary complement
to the otherwise heady survey of the important literature in this
area. While she does not always mix it well for this reader,
I let go of my irritation when I recognized that Tisdell was either
deliberately or unconsciously reflecting back to me the world
in which we teaching academics live: we thrive on the moments,
and are accountable for the monuments.
Exploring Spirituality and Culture is primarily concerned
with, and drawn from, culturally relevant, transformative adult
education and its attendant foci on equity in adult and higher
education in regard to race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation
and abledness. Classroom illustrations, research subjects, and
supportive theoreticians are clustered around the considerable
arena of discourse generated by teachers, administrators, activists
and community organizers who have brought this awareness and deliberateness
into academic design and intention. Tisdell's unique contribution
to this vast array lies in her weaving together the distinctiveness
of cultural formations, as affected by the very personal circumstances
of the individual, and the commonly recognizable elements of spirituality.
She immediately and helpfully provides her working frame of reference
for spirituality, so that it does not slip away into the ethers
so many of us fear it inhabits. She shows us a set of dynamics
familiar to us, whether we've ever, as she lightly writes from
time to time, "used the 's' word" or not. In sum, Tisdell
makes these wise assumptions about spirituality: while interrelated
for some, religion and spirituality are not the same; spirituality
involves an honoring of the interconnectedness of all things;
it is about the creation of meaning and movement toward greater
authenticity; knowing in spirituality more often than not involves
art, image, symbol, and ritual; spiritual experiences most often
happen by surprise; and finally, a coda for the book itself, spirituality
is always present in the learning environment, whether we acknowledge
it or not.
Tisdell is the first to grant that there are some difficult and
controversial coordinates on this map. What brightens this reader's
journey with her through the territory is her fearless and consistent
engagement with the material that runs counter to the heavy traditions
of rationality in the dominant culture of the academy. Or perhaps
I should say, the once dominant culture of the academy, as Tisdell's
work is a reminder that whether we like it or not, the wheel has
turned a bit in our academic settings, and we carry an accountability
now for what adult learners have always known: learning is a matter
of the heart and spirit as well as of the head.
What I especially cherish about her writing is that Tisdell demonstrates,
even without trying, the applicability of her highly focused and
contextualized work to where I find myself as an educator. Sometimes
our most well intentioned mentors wind up only conversant with
those already at the table; Tisdell takes the message and its
embodiment in relevant learning design and creative possibility
onto the street.
And finally, with all the "post-isms" tossing about
today, Tisdell only moderately notes where she needs to do so,
her place on the spectrum of scholarship. Rather than belaboring
why she is where she is, she shows us how she and her collaborators
have come to this place. She quietly goes about her work in this
immediate, wounded world so freshly bent and wondered, with the
joy and hope that pervades holistic learning and teaching. Little
did the great encyclopedists of the human spirit know, or afford
to imagine, that activist educators would recognize the content
of the gathering as the process of the gathered. Tisdell is amongst
those who have done so, and I, for one, am glad for that. Be
patient with this book; it deserves your read.
Wayne A. Ewing
UNC Asheville