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SELF BEYOND SELF/LOST IN PRACTICE Surveillance, appearance and posthuman possibilities PDF

169 Pages·2015·1.61 MB·English
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CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by Open Research Exeter SELF BEYOND SELF/LOST IN PRACTICE Surveillance, appearance and posthuman possibilities for critical selfhood in children’s services in England Submitted by Ruth Hubbard to the University of Exeter as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Education(EdD), August 2014. This thesis is available for library use on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. I certify that all material in this thesis which is not my own work has been identified and that no material has previously been submitted and approved for the award of a degree by this or any other University. Signature 1 Abstract The selfhood of social professionals in children’s services is under-researched, and where the primary focus is on practice ‘outcomes’. Informed by a critical social policy frame this thesis focuses on the selfhood of social professionals in children’s services to ask how it might, or might not, be possible to think, and do, self differently. I bring into play a critical posthumanist (non-sovereign) becoming self alongside, and in relation to, the other ‘allowed’ or ‘prescribed’ selves of neo- liberalism, professional practice and (critical) social policy itself. Utilising theoretical resources, in particular from Arendt, Deleuze and Guattari, and Foucault, I characterise this as thinking with both ‘surveillance’ and ‘appearance’, and self as an explicitly political project. In a post-structural frame I pursue a post-methodological rhizomatic and cartographic methodology that aims to open up proliferations in thinking and knowledge rather than foreclose it to one clear answer, and where I also draw on a small number of interviews with experienced professionals and managers in children’s services. A rhizomatic figure of thought involves irreducible and multiple relations that are imbricated on the surface; it is a flattened picture where theory, data, researcher, participants and analysis are not separate, where all connections are part of an overall picture, and in movement. I argue that social professionals occupy a deeply striated landscape for being/knowing/practising, a particular ontological grid that tethers their selfhood to the pre-existing, and to intensifications in a neo-liberal project. Here, ‘rearranging the chairs’ becomes more of the same, where the sovereign humanist subject is “a normative frame and an institutionalised practice” (Braidotti, 2013, p.30). In thinking otherwise, beyond traditional critical theory, a posthuman lens draws attention to the ways in which we might be/live both inside and outside of the already existing and where we become with others, human and non-human in shifting assemblages. However, the self prescribed and prefigured in dominant discourses constitute the historical preconditions from which experiments in self, and other possibilities may emerge. Practices of de-familiarisation, a radical, non-linear relationality, and a hermeneutics of situation are suggested as strategies for thinking forward, for appearance, and a self beyond self. 2 Acknowledgements Firstly, a heartfelt thank you to my supervisors, Deborah Osberg and Nadine Schaefer, and not only for their patience. The theoretical and international reach of Deborah’s work, and her straightforward belief, encouraged me to be ambitious. Nadine always questioned me critically and insistently and I felt secure in, and grateful for, her careful attention to my work. At heart though, in these times of very strange things happening in higher education, I was simply relieved and grateful to have had an educational relationship with my supervisors (that even allowed for some occasional ‘messiness’), I really valued this. I also want to thank my colleagues – Sue Lea, Christine Smith, Lisa Spencer-Woodley, Jo Trelfa, Mel Feek, and Nicky Davies. I have so very much valued their support and encouragement, ideas, and friendship over a long period of time, and I will really miss them in my new job in Manchester. In addition, sixteen years with students (who are mostly social professionals), and stakeholders, at the University of St Mark and St John has been pretty profound - a thank you feels insipid for so many things given that are now part of me. On a personal level, the person most (always) on my mind in the latter stages and in writing- up has been Jess. I don’t know the many and nuanced ways she may have infused this text, but we bring all sorts of our selves to what we do and I know she is in here, it would be foolish to pretend otherwise. In a very big way, Jess, and my other (just as special) daughter Alice, and also Kate, have been unstinting and unsparing in their resolve about me and this thesis – and to discuss Hannah Arendt and Gilles Deleuze (amongst many other things) with endless interest, patience and good humour. I’m deeply grateful to them - they have always been what has sustained me. Finally, I want to thank Lindsey for always reminding me of the and….and….and….I’m not sure anything much was viable without this, and I think we may both know how hard- fought/won even a tenuous and fleeting grasp of this can be. 3 C o n t e n t s I n B r I e f Abstract 2 Acknowledgements 3 Contents in Full 5 List of Figures and Tables 8 Chapter 1: Introduction 9 Presenting and mapping the territory Chapter 2: Methodology and Becoming-Researcher 29 Research strategy and methods Chapter 3: Self and Social Policy 57 The limits to selfhood in critical social policy analysis Chapter 4: Victoria Climbié and Children’s Services 81 The social professional after Climbié and the development of children’s services Chapter 5: Selfhood and Surveillance 102 Constituting selfhood in surveillance, and its intensifications in neo-liberalism Chapter 6: Posthumanist Reclamations: Being/Knowing/Practising 129 Rethinking self beyond the humanist, in appearance Chapter 7: Conclusions 146 Significance of the research and its possibilities Bibliography 153 4 C o n t e n t s I n F u l l Abstract 2 Acknowledgements 3 Contents in Brief 4 List of Tables and Figures 8 Chapter 1: Introduction 9 Presenting and mapping the territory 1.1 Selfhood and social professionals in children’s services 9 1.2 Resources 15 1.2.1 The dominance of humanism 16 1.2.2 Posthumanism and monism 18 1.2.3 Performativity and bringing things into relation 20 1.2.4 Posthumanist differing 21 1.2.5 Posthumanism and perspectivism 22 1.2.6 Power, surveillance and appearance 23 1.3 Conclusion and research objectives 25 Chapter 2: Methodology and Becoming-Researcher 29 Research strategy and methods 2.1 Introduction 29 2.2 Ontological and epistemological considerations 30 2.3 Research devices 38 2.3.1 Rhizomes and assemblage 38 2.3.2 Mapping and Cutting 39 2.3.2 An experiment in effecting affective relations 44 2.3.3 Interviews 47 2.3.4 The methodology as production 52 2.4 Progressions 55 5 Chapter 3: Self and Social Policy 57 The limits to selfhood in critical social policy analysis 3.1 Introduction 57 3.2 Social Policy Towards ‘the Postmodern’ 60 3.3 Categorical, Ontological and Relational Social Identities 67 3.4 Reading Social Policy’s Desires 73 Chapter 4: Victoria Climbié and Children’s Services 81 The social professional after Climbié and the development of children’s services 4.1 Introduction 81 4.2 The Victoria Climbié Inquiry 83 4.3 Integrating Services 88 4.4 Tools, for Research, Evidence and Monitoring 95 4.5 Workforce Reform 100 Chapter 5: Selfhood and Surveillance 102 Constituting selfhood in surveillance, and its intensifications in neo-liberalism 5.1 Introduction 102 5.2 Constituting Self in Children’s Services 105 5.3 Towards Austerity 114 5.4 Surveillance: Intensifications in Neo-Liberalism 119 5.5 Lost in Practice? 125 Chapter 6: Posthumanist Reclamations: Being/Knowing/Practising 129 Rethinking self beyond the humanist, in appearance 6.1 Introduction 129 6.2 Thinking/Being Otherwise 132 6.2.1 De-familiarisation 132 6 6.2.2 Non-linear relationality 140 6.2.3 A hermeneutics of situation 143 Chapter 7: Conclusions 146 Significance of the research and its possibilities 7.1 Conclusion and Summary of the Thesis 146 Bibliography 153 7 L i s t o f F i g u r e s a n d T a b l e s F I g u r e s Figure 1: The Children’s Workforce (DCSF, 2008) 90 Figure 2: The ‘onion’ diagram (DfES, 2004) 90 T a b l e s Table 1: Postpositivist New Paradigm Inquiry (Lather and St Pierre, 2013) 32 Table 2: Interview participant descriptors 47 Table 3: Three analytically distinct elements of social identity 71 (Hunter, 2002) Table 4: Constituting self in surveillance in children’s services: static and becoming selves 111 8 C h a p t e r 1 INTRODUCTION Presenting and mapping the territory Dominant strategies do not occupy an empty landscape. They have to overcome resistances, refusals and blockages. For many reasons, the public realm....is part of the ‘grit’ that prevents the imagined neo-liberal world system functioning smoothly…. The contested fortunes of the public realm are testimony to the limitations of neo- liberalism’s plan to rule the world. (Clarke 2004, p.44-45) If we had a keen vision and feeling of all ordinary human life, it would be like hearing the grass grow and the squirrel’s heart beat, and we should die of that roar which lies on the other side of silence. As it is, the quickest of us walk around well wadded with stupidity. (Eliot, 1973, p.226) 1.1 SELFHOOD AND SOCIAL PROFESSIONALS IN CHILDREN’S SERVICES Social professionals operate in the spaces between policy goals and practice outcomes. The task of securing the professional to the ‘dominant strategies’ of any given order becomes, then, part of its project, as alluded to by John Clarke in relation 9 to neo-liberalism1. The battle for the “teacher’s soul” and the “terrors of performativity” (Ball, 2003) indicate that the “ground of such struggles is often highly personal” (p.216), and penetrating. That selfhood is multiply and repeatedly constituted in, or saturated by, material and discursive relations2 is a broad position explained and advanced from a whole variety of theoretical positions, though with varying degrees of attention to, or the problematisation of, questions of dominance and subjection (and the possibilities for something other – ‘agency’ perhaps). Kitzinger’s simple statement “Identity….is what you can say you are according to what they say you can be” (1989, p.82) does direct attention to the operation of power pointing out that we can only name ourselves within, or in relation to, discourses and practices that are permitted us (see also Scott 1992). One paradox of neo-liberalism and its modes of governance is that it claims such a bounty for ‘freedom’ – “the magic of the marketplace” (Cohen and Arato 1994, p.22) - yet offers such a poverty discourse and narrow axis for self. Ball declares “we are none of the things we now do, think or desire” (2012, p.33). Informed by a critical social policy frame this thesis focuses on the selfhood of a range of social professionals in the children’s workforce – the diverse array of professionals and practitioners in the public, private and third sectors in, broadly, social work, health, youth work and education - to ask how it might, or might not, be possible to think, and do, self differently. This declares selfhood as a central concern for practice but in this (re)claiming I seek to disrupt and to rework an understanding, to move beyond (or through, or with) the requirements of self in neo-liberalism, and 1 By ‘neo-liberalism’ I mean both a political (commodifying) project and ideological commitments (discursively and materially produced) that promote free market economic (individualism) as the fundamental driver of economic and social progress, and a concomitant residual welfare state. 2 The phrase ‘material and discursive relations’ refers to the idea that both discursive and material practices may be important; it signals the inclusion here of a variety of theoretical positions that might focus on the material, rather than, for example, a classically poststructuralist emphasis on discursive productions in language. Of course, the discursive can also include the material and my general usage of ‘discourse’ is intended to include both, unless otherwise specified; I do not intend to produce a binary. However, the materiality of lived practices can sometimes be left out of the equation as has been noted by various material feminist theorists and captured in Barad’s (2003, p.801) assertion that “Language has been granted too much power”, and by others such as actor-network-theorists (for example, see Fenwick 2010; Fenwick and Edwards 2010). Discourse refers to specific social conditions that are historically situated and “Discourse is not what is said; it is that which constrains and enables what can be said. Discursive practices define what counts as meaningful statements” (Barad, 2003, p.819). 10

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Surveillance, appearance and posthuman possibilities for critical selfhood in children's youth offending (Robinson and Cottrell, 2005). Overall
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