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Class in Education Knowledge, pedagogy, subjectivity Edited by Deborah Kelsh, Dave Hill and Sheila Macrine First published 2010 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 270 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2009. To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk. © 2010 Deborah Kelsh, Dave Hill and Sheila Macrine for editorial material and selection. Individual contributors, their contribution. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Class in education : knowledge, pedagogy, subjectivity / edited by Deborah Kelsh, Dave Hill, and Sheila Macrine. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Educational sociology. 2. Critical pedagogy. 3. Educational equalization. 4. Social classes—Economic aspects. I. Kelsh, Deborah. II. Hill, Dave, 1945- III. Macrine, Sheila L. LC189.C545 2010 306.43s—dc22 2009009253 ISBN 0-203-87093-X Master e-book ISBN ISBN 10: 0-415-45027-6 (hbk) ISBN 10: 0-203-87903-X (ebk) ISBN 13: 978-0-415-45027-0 (hbk) ISBN 13: 978-0-203-87093-8 (ebk) Contents List of figures vii Notes on contributors viii Foreword xi E. SAN JUAN, JR. Introduction 1 SHEILA MACRINE, DAVE HILL AND DEBORAH KELSH 1 Cultureclass 6 DEBORAH KELSH 2 Hypohumanities 39 TERESA L. EBERT AND MAS’UD ZAVARZADEH 3 Persistent inequities, obfuscating explanations: reinforcing the lost centrality of class in Indian education debates 66 RAVI KUMAR 4 Class, “race” and state in post-apartheid education 87 ENVER MOTALA AND SALIM VALLY 5 Racism and Islamophobia in post 7/7 Britain: Critical Race Theory, (xeno-)racialization, empire and education – a Marxist analysis 108 MIKE COLE AND ALPESH MAISURIA 6 Marxism, critical realism and class: implications for a socialist pedagogy 128 GRANT BANFIELD vi Contents 7 Globalization, class, and the social studies curriculum 153 E. WAYNE ROSS AND GREG QUEEN 8 Class: the base of all reading 175 ROBERT FAIVRE Afterword: the contradictions of class and the praxis of becoming 196 PETER MCLAREN Index of names 202 Figures 6.1 Strong historical materialism 140 6.2 The dimensions of spacio-temporal extension and ontological generality 144 6.3 The three-dimensional modal operation incorporating vantage point 145 7.1 Fred Wright cartoon, ‘So Long Partner!’ 163 7.2 ‘CEO Pay,’ from A Field Guide to the U.S. Economy 164 Contributors Grant Banfield teaches educational sociology and qualitative approaches to research in the School of Education at Flinders University, Adelaide. His intellectual interests lie in the application of Marxism and critical realist philosophy to the problems of education, schooling and “critical” pedagogy in contemporary capital- ist society. Grant’s research interests center on contributing to the development of emancipatory social science and practice directed towards the realization of an ecologically sane and truly human future. Mike Cole is Research Professor in Education and Equality, and Head of Research at Bishop Grosseteste University College Lincoln, UK. He has published widely in the area of education and equality, racism, and Marxism and educational theory. He is the author of Marxism and Educational Theory: origins and issues, (2008), the editor of Professional Attributes and Practice for Student Teachers, 4th Edition (2008), and Education, Equality and Human Rights: issues of gender, “race,” sexuality, disability and social class, 2nd edition, all published by Routledge. Teresa L. Ebert’s writings include Ludic Feminism and After and The Task of Cultural Critique. She is co-author (with Mas’ud Zavarzadeh) of Class in Culture and co-ed- itor of two volumes in the Transformation series on Marxism and postmodernity and on Marxism, queer theory and gender. The essay on “hypohumanities” in this book is an excerpt from the book she has co-written, titled Hypohumanities. Robert Faivre teaches a range of courses for the English Division at Adirondack Community College, State University of New York (US), where he is a Professor. His interests are in the intersections of reading and class, and he is working on a book that develops a materialist theory of reading. Dave Hill is Professor of Education Policy at the University of Northampton, UK, and Chief Editor, Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, at www.jceps.com. He heads the independent e-Institute for Education Policy Studies, at www. ieps.org.uk. He is the Series Editor for Education and Neoliberalism, and for Education and Marxism, both published by Routledge. He lectures worldwide on Marxism and Education and on Radical/Socialist education. Notes on contributors ix Deborah Kelsh is an Associate Professor in the Department of Teacher Education at The College of Saint Rose in Albany, New York (US). Her scholarship focuses on the question of class in relation to the production of knowledge and pedagogy. She has publications in several journals, including The Red Critique and Cultural Logic, and a chapter in Feminism and Composition Studies (1998). She is working on a book on materialist pedagogy. Ravi Kumar teaches sociology in the Department of Sociology, Jamia Millia Islamia University, New Delhi. He has experience working with the students’ movement and other grassroots movements in backward regions of India. His publications include The Politics of Imperialism and Counterstrategies (co-edited, Delhi: Aakar Books, 2004); The Crisis of Elementary Education in India (edited, Sage, 2006); and Global Neoliberalism and Education and its Consequences (co-edited, Routledge: New York, 2008). Peter McLaren, Ph.D., is a Professor at the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles. He is the author, co- author, editor and co-editor of approximately 40 books and monographs. Several hundred of his articles, chapters, interviews, reviews, commentaries and columns have appeared in dozens of scholarly journals and professional magazines since the publication of his first book, Cries from the Corridor, in 1980. His work has been translated into 17 languages. He lectures internationally and is a member of the Industrial Workers of the World. Sheila Macrine, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Curriculum and Teaching Department at Montclair State University in New Jersey (US). Her scholarly interests focus on connecting the cultural, institutional and personal contexts of pedagogy, particularly as they relate to the social imagination and progressive democratic education. She writes about the relationships among the complex social issues of difference (race, class, gender and disability, etc.) within urban schools and the political economy of schooling within the broader context of post-industrial capitalism. Alpesh Maisuria is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Wolverhampton, UK. He teaches across a range of Education Studies modules. His specialization is the sociology of education, particularly the analysis of “race” through social class, adopting and developing a classical Marxist perspective. Alpesh has also published papers exploring the private sector’s involvement in education. He has recently explored the “war on terror” and its linkages to capitalist relations of produc- tion, particularly exploring Critical Race Theory and the Marxist concept of racialization. Enver Motala was a lawyer for the independent trade union movement during the apartheid era and also played a significant role in the anti-apartheid education movement. After the first democratic elections, he was appointed the Deputy Director-General of Education in the province of Gauteng. He is presently an as- sociate of the Education Policy Consortium for whom he has coordinated research x Notes on contributors projects on democracy, human rights and social justice in education in South Africa. He has also done similar work for the Nelson Mandela Foundation. Greg Queen is a social studies teacher at Fitzgerald High School in Warren, Michigan. He is co-editor of The Rouge Forum News and has made numerous presentations at professional meetings, including the National Council for the Social Studies and Michigan Council for the Social Studies. He is the lead author of “‘I Participate, You Participate, We Participate…’: Notes on Building a K-16 Movement for Democracy and Social Justice,” published in Workplace: A Journal for Academic Labor (www.workplace-gsc.com). E. Wayne Ross is Professor in the Department of Curriculum Studies at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. He is the author of numer- ous publications on curriculum theory, politics of education, and critical pedagogy. His edited books include Battleground Schools: an encyclopedia of conflict and contro- versy (Greenwood, co-edited with Sandra Mathison), Neoliberalism and Education Reform (Hampton Press, co-edited with Rich Gibson) and Democratic Social Education (RoutledgeFalmer, co-edited with David Hursh). He is a former day- care and secondary school teacher and a co-founder of The Rouge Forum (www. rougeforum.org). E. San Juan, Jr. heads the Philippines Cultural Studies Center, Storrs, CT (US). He is Emeritus Professor of English, Comparative Literature, and Ethnic Studies at various universities. He was a fellow at the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute, Harvard University, in Spring 2009. His recent books are In the Wake of Terror (Lexington) and US Imperialism and Revolution in the Philippines (Palgrave). Salim Vally is a member of the Faculty of Education, University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He was a regional executive member of the high school South African Students Movement until its banning in 1977. He is the spokesperson of the Anti-War Coalition and the Palestine Solidarity Committee, serves on the boards of various non-governmental and professional organizations, and is an active member of various social movements. Vally is also the coordinator of the Education Rights Project which works with communities in many townships and informal settlements around the country. Mas’ud Zavarzadeh is author of several books including Seeing Films Politically. His new book, Totality and the Post, will be published early next year. Foreword E. San Juan, Jr. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989, the ruling classes of the industrial- ized world celebrated the end of class struggle and the proverbial immortality of the capitalist world-system. But scarcely had its first decade ended when disaster struck. Behind the illusion of a permanent market utopia lurked internal decay, a precipitous meltdown. September 11, 2001 was just a portent of the impending breakdown. With the slide of the US and the world economy into an unprecedented impasse, a crisis reminiscent of the 1929 Wall Street crash, but much more all-encompassing given the “flat world” of globalized finance capital, we are faced with a lesson that should have been learned when Marx and Engels invoked the “specter” of revolution in their 1848 Manifesto – the lesson of class struggle as the necessary framework for understanding world history and its laws of motion. It is one we need today in order to grapple with and make sense of the contradictory currents and tendencies traversing our daily lives, for which this book is a timely heuristic and guide. The contemporary situation is indeed even worse than in 1929, or since World War II (as Kevin Phillips observes [2008]). In her lead essay, Deborah Kelsh sums up the sharpened class contradictions in the US and around the world hidden behind pluralist, post- and neo-Weberian mystifications. Kelsh uses the astutely formulated concept of “cultureclass” to denote the way in which the dominant ideology obscures private property – that is, the private ownership of the vital means of production and the private appropriation of material wealth (aggregated surplus value) produced by workers – on which class exploitation is grounded. “Cultureclass” prevents the people from acquiring the necessary knowledge of the totality of social relations of production – a knowledge of the internal contradictions inherent in a crisis-ridden capitalist society. This knowledge equals class consciousness, enabling a radical praxis of critique to transform society. “Cultureclass” separates culture and plural identities from their roots in “the inequitable binary relation of owning,” the foundation of capitalist production and exploitation. Preventing a critical analysis of property relations, “cultureclass” serves as the ideological instrument of finance-capital based on the commodification of knowledge, culture, ideas, etc. for corporate profit and capital accumulation. “Cultureclass” is the neoliberal privileging of minds detached from labor, subordinating the call of every person’s “freedom from need” to the “free- market” demands of status-obsessed consumerism. Kelsh’s theorizing of “cultureclass” at the opening of this volume is crucial in

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In contemporary pedagogy, "class" has become one nomadic sign among others: it has no referent but only contingent allusions to similarly traveling signs. Class, that is, no longer explains social conflicts and antagonisms rooted in social divisions of labor, but instead portrays a cultural carnival
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