Continuing the narrative some 20 years later.
Gough, Noel
I wrote 'Narrative and Nature: Unsustainable Fictions in
Environmental Education' in 1991 as a revised version of a paper
subtitled 'Poststructural Inquiries in Environmental
Education' that I presented at the Sixth National Conference of the
Australian Association for Environmental Education in September 1990. To
the best of my knowledge, these papers were the first instances of
advocacy for poststructuralist analyses of dicourses/practices in the
Anglophone literature of environmental education. The key influences on
my thinking at this time were US and Canadian
'reconceptualist' curriculum scholars, including Cleo
Cherryholmes, Jacques Daignault, William Doll, Clermont Gauthier,
Rebecca Martusewicz, William Pinar and William Reynolds. The
significance and impact of my poststructuralist inquiries in
environmental education were recognised by the award of the inaugural
Australian Museum Eureka Prize for Environmental Education Research in
1997. Since then, my 'post' scholarship has expanded to
include postcolonialism and posthumanism. Narrative continues to be an
important theme in my work, especially through my development of an
approach to narrative experimentation that I call 'rhizosemiotic
play'.
doi 10.1017/aee.2014.20
Biography
In July 2014, I retired from my position as Foundation Professor of
Outdoor and Environmental Education at La Trobe University, which I held
from 2006. I continue to be affiliated with La Trobe University as an
adjunct research professor. Email: noel_family_gough2@bigpond.com
Noel Gough
La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia