2020
DOI: 10.1177/1478210320928605
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Is education exhausted?

Abstract: In the article I argue that the category of exhaustion constitutes the key to contemporary instrumental education. In my analysis I draw from Sloterdijk’s diagnosis of modern consciousness and the Deleuzian concept of exhaustion. My contention is that an explanation for a durable rule of market logic can be found in the fact that traditional narratives, that is, narratives which place God or Reason as arche of the world, have expired and exposed the emptiness. The space, not occupied anymore by God or Reason,… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…53 And while this negation frustrates those well-trained attachments to the instrumental impulse seeking an end, it "does not," as Katarzyna Dworakowska writes, "involve filling the (empty) space with another narrative." 54 By understanding teachers' resistance to their instrumentalization by policy in terms of an ontological politics of refusal, this analysis, perhaps in a way that is undesirable in a conclusion, stops short of satisfying any demand for what comes after these refusals. The protests have not ended, and international education policies show no sign of abating in their instrumentalization of teachers as the most important in-school factor in raising student achievement.…”
Section: Refusing Instrumentalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…53 And while this negation frustrates those well-trained attachments to the instrumental impulse seeking an end, it "does not," as Katarzyna Dworakowska writes, "involve filling the (empty) space with another narrative." 54 By understanding teachers' resistance to their instrumentalization by policy in terms of an ontological politics of refusal, this analysis, perhaps in a way that is undesirable in a conclusion, stops short of satisfying any demand for what comes after these refusals. The protests have not ended, and international education policies show no sign of abating in their instrumentalization of teachers as the most important in-school factor in raising student achievement.…”
Section: Refusing Instrumentalismmentioning
confidence: 99%