Thinking with Things: Reimagining the Object Lesson as a Feminist Pedagogical Device in the Humanities Classroom

dc.contributor.advisorMerry Wiesner-Hanks
dc.contributor.committeememberSarah Anne Carter
dc.contributor.committeememberHolly Hassel
dc.contributor.committeememberChristine Evans
dc.contributor.committeememberJoe Austin
dc.creatorGrensavitch, Krista
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-16T18:18:45Z
dc.date.available2025-01-16T18:18:45Z
dc.date.issued2019-08-01
dc.description.abstractIn this dissertation, I continue nascent discussions of incorporating material culture in humanities classrooms in higher education. Primarily, this conversation stems from the material turn in the discipline of history, and in the humanities, more generally. It responds to calls that students in higher education must acquire the modes of thinking particular to practitioners within their discipline. My contribution sits at the intersection of material culture theory, feminist pedagogy, and the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL), and is a work of feminist praxis. I centralize my own teaching practice and draw extensively from my experiences developing curricula and facilitating spaces of teaching and learning. Knowing that the full breadth of the human experience cannot be understood from consulting written texts alone, I turn to material culture to address gaps and silences. This move, I contend, allows for teachers and learners to represent, highlight, and interrogate a broad range of identities. When rooted in material culture theory, it offers novel epistemological routes for exploring knowledge and meaning-making. My object-centered teaching and learning approach builds from an extant pedagogical form: the object lesson. In the nineteenth century, the object lesson emerged from the theoretical basis that knowledge is to be gained through sensation and reflection. Object lessons provide a scaffolded approach to learning through and with material objects. I have made liberal use of the term and idea throughout this dissertation, as have other researchers and pedagogues. By bringing practices of engaged pedagogy - that which seeks to create and maintain well-being within the classroom - to bear on object-centered teaching and learning, I make this a distinctively feminist endeavor. I address both why others should engage in similar practices and, through modeling and creating usable resources, how they could undertake such a pedagogical shift. I expand theoretical discussions on authority, identity, and unknowability and how they can be manifest in spaces of teaching and learning and the impact they can have on well-being. Thus, what is distinctive about my research is that I promote, not simply describe and analyze, a material turn in teaching and learning for a broad audience.
dc.identifier.urihttp://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/86592
dc.relation.replaceshttps://dc.uwm.edu/etd/2190
dc.subjectFeminist Pedagogy
dc.subjectMaterial Culture Theory
dc.subjectObject Lesson
dc.subjectScholarship of Teaching and Learning
dc.titleThinking with Things: Reimagining the Object Lesson as a Feminist Pedagogical Device in the Humanities Classroom
dc.typedissertation
thesis.degree.disciplineHistory
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
thesis.degree.nameDoctor of Philosophy

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