Culture and the Political Economy of Schooling

Culture and the Political Economy of Schooling
Author: John Morgan
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2018-10-03
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781351612609

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Since the global financial crisis of 2007-08 the question of the aims of schooling have assumed greater importance. There has been no ‘return to normal’, yet young people are encouraged to ‘Keep calm and go to university’. Culture and the Political Economy of Schooling explores the possibilities for the emergence of a progressive agenda for schooling. Culture and the Political Economy of Schooling provides educators and social scientists with the essential background required to understand changes in schooling since the Second World War. It introduces theories of the economic crisis, and explores their educational implications, before going on to provide accounts of how politics and culture have shaped debates about schooling. This cultural political economy approach is applied to issues such as social class, race, the brave new worlds of work, the dangerous rise of creative education, and the increasingly urgent question of inequality. The final parts of the book explore the educational challenges of the Anthropocene and the changing conceptions of knowledge in schools and finally consider alternatives to contemporary schooling. The students in our schools today will face a future framed by the twin crises of economy and environment, prompting an urgent rethink of education. Written in an accessible and engaging manner, this book is an essential guide for thinking about the past, present and futures of education. It will be of great interest to researchers and graduate students of education studies, curriculum studies, sociology of education, education politics and education policy.

Schooling as a Ritual Performance

Schooling as a Ritual Performance
Author: Peter McLaren
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 438
Release: 1999
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0847691969

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In this third edition, Peter McLaren engages with some of the latest anthropological thinking and presents the reader with a powerful manifesto for critical ethnography in the 21st century.

Toward a Political Economy of Culture

Toward a Political Economy of Culture
Author: Andrew Calabrese,Colin Sparks
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Total Pages: 396
Release: 2003-11-22
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781461700357

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Several of the most important and influential political economists of communication working today explore a rich mix of topics and issues that link work, policy studies, and research and theory about the public sphere to the heritage of political economy. Familiar but still exceedingly important topics covered include market structures and media concentration, regulation and policy, technological impacts on particular media sectors, information poverty, and media access. The book also features several new topics for future political economy study.

The Political Economy of Canadian Schooling

The Political Economy of Canadian Schooling
Author: Terry Wotherspoon
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 348
Release: 1987
Genre: Education
ISBN: STANFORD:36105031241511

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The New Political Economy of Urban Education

The New Political Economy of Urban Education
Author: Pauline Lipman
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2013-05-13
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781136759994

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Urban education and its contexts have changed in powerful ways. Old paradigms are being eclipsed by global forces of privatization and markets and new articulations of race, class, and urban space. These factors and more set the stage for Pauline Lipman's insightful analysis of the relationship between education policy and the neoliberal economic, political, and ideological processes that are reshaping cities in the United States and around the globe. Using Chicago as a case study of the interconnectedness of neoliberal urban policies on housing, economic development, race, and education, Lipman explores larger implications for equity, justice, and "the right to the city". She draws on scholarship in critical geography, urban sociology and anthropology, education policy, and critical analyses of race. Her synthesis of these lenses gives added weight to her critical appraisal and hope for the future, offering a significant contribution to current arguments about urban schooling and how we think about relations between neoliberal education reforms and the transformation of cities. By examining the cultural politics of why and how these relationships resonate with people's lived experience, Lipman pushes the analysis one step further toward a new educational and social paradigm rooted in radical political and economic democracy.

Cultural Values in Political Economy

Cultural Values in Political Economy
Author: J.P. Singh
Publsiher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2020-08-25
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781503612709

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“This masterful collection illuminates many of the all-important interfaces between culture and economy. . . . These insights have never been more important.” —W. Lance Bennett, author of News: The Politics of Illusion The backlash against globalization and the rise of cultural anxiety has led to considerable rethinking among social scientists. This book provides multiple theoretical, historical, and methodological orientations to examine these issues. While addressing the rise of populism worldwide, the volume provides explanations that cover periods of both cultural turbulence and stability. Issues addressed include populism and cultural anxiety, class, religion, arts and cultural diversity, global environment norms, international trade, and soft power. The interdisciplinary scholarship from well-known contributors questions the oft-made assumption in political economy that holds culture “constant,” which in practice means marginalizing it in the explanation. The volume conceptualizes culture as a repertoire of values and alternatives. Locating human interests in underlying cultural values does not make political economy’s strategic or instrumental calculations of interests redundant: The instrumental logic follows a social context and a distribution of cultural values, while locating forms of decision-making that may not be rational.

Ideology Culture the Process of Schooling

Ideology  Culture   the Process of Schooling
Author: Henry A. Giroux
Publsiher: Temple University Press
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1984-10
Genre: Education
ISBN: 087722370X

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This book lays bare the ideological and political character of the positivist rationality that has been the primary theoretical underpinning of educational research in the United States. These assumptions have expressed themselves in the form and content of curriculum, classroom social relations, classroom cultural artifacts, and the experiences and beliefs of teachers and students. Have existing radical critiques provided the theoretical building blocks for a new theory of pedagogy? The author attempts to move beyond the abstract, negative characteristics of many radical critiques, which are often based on false dualisms that fail to link structure and intentionally, content and process, ideology and hegemony, etc. He also is critical of the over-determined models of socialization and the abstract celebration of subjectivity that underlies much of the false utopianism of many radical perspectives. Professor Giroux begins to lay the theoretical groundwork for developing a radical pedagogy that connects critical theory with the need for social action in the interest of individual freedom and social reconstruction. Author note: Henry A. Giroux is Assistant Professor of Education at Boston University. He is the co-editor of Curriculum and Instruction: Alternatives in Education and The Hidden Curriculum and Moral Education.

Schooling in a Corporate Society

Schooling in a Corporate Society
Author: Martin Carnoy
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 338
Release: 1972
Genre: Education
ISBN: STANFORD:36105032620937

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Essays by educators and economists, asserting that the American educational system promotes the interests of elite groups in preserving the status quo.