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Re/Making Identities in the Praxis of Urban Schooling: A Cultural Historical Perspective
167
Citations
15
References
2004
Year
Mediated RelationsSocial TheoryEducationUrban SchoolingCultural StudiesCultural IdentityPersonal IdentitySociology Of EducationSocial Contexts Of EducationUrban HistoryLanguage StudiesIdentity IssueCulture EducationSocial IdentityHistory Of EducationCultural Historical PerspectiveCultureHumanitiesSituated ActivityCase StudyEthnographyAnthropologyCultural AnthropologyCultural-historical Activity Theory
Abstract In cultural historical activity theory, the entities that make a system are not conceived as independent but as aspects of mediated relations. Consequently, an individual, a tool, or a community cannot be theorized in an independent manner but must be understood in terms of the historically changing, mediated relations in which they are integral and constitutive parts. Drawing on a case study that focuses on the identities of two of the authors, we show how, by participating in the activity system of schooling, the identities of students and teachers are continuously made and remade. A teacher changes from being "someone unable to control the class" to being a respected and successful school staff member; a student changes from being a street fighter to being an A student. Identity, we argue, should therefore not be thought of as a stable characteristic of individuals but as a contingent achievement of situated activity. Our case study suggests that cogenerative dialogues involving students and their teachers provide contexts for the reflexive elaboration of mutual understanding of the identities of individuals who occupy different social locations in the activity system.
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