From 'therapeutic' to political education: the centrality of affective sensibility in critical pedagogy

While the need for humanising education is pressing in neoliberal societies, the conditions for its possibility in formal institutions have become particularly cramped. A constellation of factors - the strength of neoliberal ideologies, the corporatisation of universities, the conflation of human fr...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inCritical studies in education Vol. 52; no. 1; pp. 47 - 63
Main Author Amsler, Sarah S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Melbourne Taylor & Francis 01.02.2011
Routledge
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:While the need for humanising education is pressing in neoliberal societies, the conditions for its possibility in formal institutions have become particularly cramped. A constellation of factors - the strength of neoliberal ideologies, the corporatisation of universities, the conflation of human freedom with consumer satisfaction and a wider crisis of hope in the possibility or desirability of social change - make it difficult to apply classical theories of subject-transformation to new work in critical pedagogy. In particular, the growth of interest in pedagogies of comfort (as illustrated in certain forms of 'therapeutic' education and concerns about student 'satisfaction' in universities) and resistance to critical pedagogies suggest that subjectivty has become a primary site of political struggle in education. However, it can no longer be assumed that educators can (or should) liberate students' repressed desires for humanisation by politicising curricula, pedagogy or institutions. Rather, we must work to understand the new meanings and affective conditions of critical subjectivity itself. Bringing critical theories of subject transformation together with new work on 'pedagogies of discomfort', I suggest we can create new ways of opening up possibilities for critical education that respond to neoliberal subjectivities without corresponding to or affirming them.
Bibliography:Refereed article. Includes bibliographical references.
Critical Studies in Education; v.52 n.1 p.47-63; February 2011
Critical Studies in Education, v.52, no.1, Feb 2011: (47)-63
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 14
ISSN:1750-8487
1750-8495
DOI:10.1080/17508487.2011.536512