“Face to face” Learning from others in Facebook Groups

This paper extends Emmanuel Levinas’ articulation of “the face to face” encounter (1969, p. 79-81) to suggest that students and teachers can be brought into an ethical proximity created by the media they share and discuss online in Facebook. In Levinas’ terms, a ‘face’ is not simply a physical face....

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Main Author: Sandry, Eleanor
Format: Journal Article
Published: Digital Culture & Education 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.digitalcultureandeducation.com/uncategorized/a4_sandry/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/7095
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author Sandry, Eleanor
author_facet Sandry, Eleanor
author_sort Sandry, Eleanor
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper extends Emmanuel Levinas’ articulation of “the face to face” encounter (1969, p. 79-81) to suggest that students and teachers can be brought into an ethical proximity created by the media they share and discuss online in Facebook. In Levinas’ terms, a ‘face’ is not simply a physical face. Instead, the Levinasian face encapsulates all the ways that one person is able to reveal aspects of their personality to another. Interactions in Facebook remain “bounded by the impossibility of ever knowing the Other,” as does all communication according to Levinas (Zembylas and Vrasidas, 2005, p. 72). However, while a profile picture may or may not disclose much information about a person, the content posted and shared online (in the form of text, images, videos, likes, etc) reveals aspects of an individual’s personality in a way that encourages responses from others. Facebook can therefore bring people unable to meet in the same physical and temporal location into a proximity created by their online disclosure. In addition, the asymmetry between students and teachers, emphasised in spaces such as lecture theatres, is destabilised in Facebook to provide students and teachers the opportunity to learn from one another’s shared ideas, experiences and understandings.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-70952017-01-30T10:57:38Z “Face to face” Learning from others in Facebook Groups Sandry, Eleanor Learning Levinas Ethics Asymmetry Online Facebook Face This paper extends Emmanuel Levinas’ articulation of “the face to face” encounter (1969, p. 79-81) to suggest that students and teachers can be brought into an ethical proximity created by the media they share and discuss online in Facebook. In Levinas’ terms, a ‘face’ is not simply a physical face. Instead, the Levinasian face encapsulates all the ways that one person is able to reveal aspects of their personality to another. Interactions in Facebook remain “bounded by the impossibility of ever knowing the Other,” as does all communication according to Levinas (Zembylas and Vrasidas, 2005, p. 72). However, while a profile picture may or may not disclose much information about a person, the content posted and shared online (in the form of text, images, videos, likes, etc) reveals aspects of an individual’s personality in a way that encourages responses from others. Facebook can therefore bring people unable to meet in the same physical and temporal location into a proximity created by their online disclosure. In addition, the asymmetry between students and teachers, emphasised in spaces such as lecture theatres, is destabilised in Facebook to provide students and teachers the opportunity to learn from one another’s shared ideas, experiences and understandings. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/7095 http://www.digitalcultureandeducation.com/uncategorized/a4_sandry/ Digital Culture & Education fulltext
spellingShingle Learning
Levinas
Ethics
Asymmetry
Online
Facebook
Face
Sandry, Eleanor
“Face to face” Learning from others in Facebook Groups
title “Face to face” Learning from others in Facebook Groups
title_full “Face to face” Learning from others in Facebook Groups
title_fullStr “Face to face” Learning from others in Facebook Groups
title_full_unstemmed “Face to face” Learning from others in Facebook Groups
title_short “Face to face” Learning from others in Facebook Groups
title_sort “face to face” learning from others in facebook groups
topic Learning
Levinas
Ethics
Asymmetry
Online
Facebook
Face
url http://www.digitalcultureandeducation.com/uncategorized/a4_sandry/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/7095