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288 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2002
'... The great teacher is not always just a bringer of sweetness and light. Socrates often did not like what he saw when he looked into the lives of his students. In fact he was demoralised by it. He fought against their worst side, kindly, with their souls' interest at heart, all the while admitting that he too was fallible. Lears, like Socrates, can remind us that a great teacher is not necessarily a friend, much less a "facilitator". He can be a spiritual antagonist and goad as much as an ally. (...)
So I have written this book to make Lears and his kind a little more visible when they do manifest themselves in the world. And I have written it, too, to give teachers who see their job as a combination of care and provocation a measure of encouragement at a time when many forces are trying to make them members of the service economy - people who provide skills, marketable knowledge, negotiable habits, but not inspiration, not the wherewhithal to change a life around'.