2007
DOI: 10.1177/016146810710900703
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Difficult Collective Deliberations: Anthropological Notes toward a Theory of Education

Abstract: Background/Context In the 1970s, Lawrence Cremin urged researchers to remember that education is more than schooling. Few heeded this call, perhaps because of the absence of the theoretical framework needed to make this more than a platitude. As a cultural anthropologist, I argue that education is a fundamental human activity that is infinitely more complex than anything that can happen during learning lessons in school. The argument is a theoretical one bolstered by the case studies included in this special i… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Reflective freedom constitutes the ability for individuals to self‐monitor and evaluate their thoughts and desires, considering possible actions. This perspective allows for an understanding of how ethical frameworks are socialized, and how institutions like schools can become arenas for interpersonal and public ethical ‘deliberation’ (Varenne 2007: 1569). Schools, understood as important foci in a multi‐centred process of education, are institutions which ‘[transform] experiences of the “everyday” … into categories of social differentiation and identification’ (Stambach 2006: 10).…”
Section: The Ethics Of Religious Boundariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reflective freedom constitutes the ability for individuals to self‐monitor and evaluate their thoughts and desires, considering possible actions. This perspective allows for an understanding of how ethical frameworks are socialized, and how institutions like schools can become arenas for interpersonal and public ethical ‘deliberation’ (Varenne 2007: 1569). Schools, understood as important foci in a multi‐centred process of education, are institutions which ‘[transform] experiences of the “everyday” … into categories of social differentiation and identification’ (Stambach 2006: 10).…”
Section: The Ethics Of Religious Boundariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1. This chapter is part of a sequence of essays on education and the politics of productive ignorance (Varenne 2007a(Varenne , 2007b(Varenne , 2008(Varenne , 2009(Varenne , 2011. 2.…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, much of the early work in the field focused on enculturation, asking how children learn a culture, or socialization, which might be defined as the process of learning social norms and ideologies. Thus, anthropology of education is committed to a very broad notion of education, one which the ethnomethodologist Herve Varenne (2007Varenne ( , p. 1562) defines as "[...] continued efforts to change both oneself and one's consociates through often difficult collective deliberations".…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%