Publication | Closed Access
Governmentality and the Sociology of Education: Media, educational policy and the politics of resentment
62
Citations
17
References
2000
Year
EthnicityGlobal ForcesCritical Race TheoryMulticultural EducationRace LawEducationRacial StudyClass StudiesPopular CultureJournalismMedia StudiesRaceContemporary RacismMedia ActivismEducational PolicyRaciolinguisticsSociology Of EducationAfrican American StudiesPolitical CommunicationEthnic StudiesMedia InstitutionsRacialization StudiesIntersectionalityMulticulturalismHistory Of EducationBilingual EducationAnti-racismCultureMedia PoliciesSocial Foundations Of EducationSocial Science EducationArtsEducation ReformEducation PolicyRace RelationSocial Diversity
Abstract This paper argues that theorizations of the state which are sensitive to both its durability and its permeability, and theorizations which can account for the massive interconnections between local and global forces as well as different material and discursive sites are missing from contemporary work in the sociology of education. Drawing on Foucault's notion of 'governmentality' as a key resource for addressing this impasse, the authors highlight the constant fabrication of racial identity through the production of the pure space of racial origins or 'resentment'—the process of defining one's identity through the negation of the other. This dynamic, the article maintains, now informs key discourses both in popular culture and education. The authors conclude that these processes operate in tandem in the prosecution of the politics of racial exclusion in our times, informing key policy debates, including those around affirmative action and bilingual education.
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