From the moment the first shots were fired by Russian soldiers in their invasion of Ukraine, Peter Mc Laren began writing about what has turned out to be the deadliest conflict in Europe since World War II. Putin’s invasion caused Mc Laren to think about his father, a World War II veteran who served in the Royal Canadian Engineers, and his uncle, a World War II hero who served in the Royal Navy and played a leading role in sinking the battleship Bismarck. Fearing the conflict would escalate beyond Ukraine, Mc Laren furiously put pen to page and published 25 articles in the New Zealand journal, Pesa Agora, and wrestled with some of the moral dilemmas surrounding the conflict, including the possibility of a World War III nuclear catastrophe. Mc Laren made the decision to support Ukraine during the first few weeks of the conflict. In writing about the war in his signature literary style, which inspired the late Joe Kincheloe to name Mc Laren ’the poet laureate of the educational left’,
Mc Laren was also closely following political events in the United States. Years before, Mc Laren had predicted that his adopted country would soon be treading towards fascism, as he watched with increasing alarm Trump operatives such as Steve Bannon put into effect propaganda efforts redolent of those crafted by the Third Reich leading up to World War II. Mc Laren’s voice has often been described as prophetic, in consonance with the prophetic tradition of theology, and his approach in this work can be likened to the ‘problem-posing’ approach of the Brazilian educator, Paulo Freire, in that his writings are meant to raise provocative questions for discussion, with solutions to follow after intense and extended dialogue. It is in this sense that the book attempts to make the political more pedagogical and the pedagogical more political–and theological. Most disturbing for Mc Laren in writing about the war in Ukraine were the number of supporters for Putin’s bloody war, typically among Trump supporters but also including some factions of the ultra-left. Mc Laren’s own approach is dialectical, passionately supporting Ukraine while at the same time scathingly critical of Putin and United States foreign policy.
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Peter Mc Laren is Distinguished Professor in Critical Studies and Co-Director and International Ambassador for Global Ethics and Social Justice, The Paulo Freire Democratic Project, Donna Ford Attallah College of Educational Studies, Chapman University. He is Emeritus Professor at UCLA and served as Chair Professor (the highest rank given to foreign professors) at Northeast Normal University in Changchun, China. Professor Mc Laren is the author and editor of over 50 books and hundreds of journal articles and book chapters. His writings have been translated into 25 languages. Professor Mc Laren is one of the original architects of what has come to be known as critical pedagogy. Professor Mc Laren serves on numerous editorial and advisory boards, including the International Advisory Board of The International Marxist-Humanist, journal of the International Marxist-Humanist Organization, and Philosophy of Education (Ukraine). He has been ranked by Research.com among the top 15% of the world’s leading social science and humanities scientists.