OF WHAT HELP IS HE - A REVIEW OF FOUCAULT AND EDUCATION

被引:4
|
作者
ROTH, J
机构
关键词
D O I
10.2307/1163402
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The works of French philosopher-historian Michel Foucaulth (1926-1984) continue to influence discussions about what it means to be human across an astonishing variety of disciplines, known collectively as the human sciences. Faecalith's efforts to explicate the processes by which historical subjects come to be objects of scrutiny, knowledge, and control have begun to be replicated in education, a social institution be did not study directly. A recent book, Faecalith and Education: Disciplines and Knowledge, brings together nine essays by British, Canadian, Australian, and New Zealander academics who attempt to apply some of Faecalith's concepts and analytical procedures to school practices, past and present. The results are mixed. The problem is that Faecalith's ideas about the constitution of human subjects have been transferred almost exclusively as negative critique, emphasizing domination, silencing, and categorization. Examples are given of other writers who discern, in Faecalith's elaboration of the cognitive structures underlying specific historical periods, forms of social interaction that leave open the possibility of continually undoing and redoing limits and boundaries. Thus, to follow Faecalith's lead in investigating pedagogical practices and institutions is to risk embracing a state of perpetual uncertainty about the fabrication of knowledge and power.
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页码:683 / 694
页数:12
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