ABSTRACT

The marketised and securitised shaping of formal education sites in terms of risk prevention strategies have transformed what it means to be a learner and a citizen. In this book, Karl Kitching explores racialised dimensions to suggest how individuals and collectives are increasingly made responsible for their own welfare as ‘good’ or ‘bad’ students, at the expense of the protection of their rights as learner-citizens. Focusing on Ireland as a post-colonial Atlantic state, the book demonstrates how liberal governance, racisms, migration and mass education are interconnected and struggled over at local, national, European and global levels.

Using a variety of qualitative studies and analytic approaches, The Politics of Compulsive Education details the significance of mass education(s) to the ongoing racialisation of national sovereignty. It draws on in-depth historical, policy, media and school-based research, moving from the 19th century to the present day. Chapters explore diverse themes such as student deportation, austerity and the politics of community ‘integration’, the depoliticisation of third level education via international student and ‘quality’ teacher regimes, the racialised distribution of learner ‘ability’, and school-based bullying and harassment. Combined, these studies demonstrate the possibilities and constraints that exist for educational anti-racisms both in terms of social movements and everyday classroom situations.

The Politics of Compulsive Education asks key questions about anti-racist responsibility across multiple education sites and explores how racisms are both shaped, and can be interrupted, by the interaction of the global and the local, as seen in terms of migration, the distribution of capital, media, education policy discourse, and teacher and learner identifications. It will be of interest to researchers, academics and postgraduate students of sociology, education, cultural studies, political theory, philosophy and postcolonial studies.  

chapter 1|21 pages

Compulsive education

The troubling uses of race, migration and learner-citizenship

chapter 2|20 pages

Ambivalent Atlantic encounters

Assembling ‘the Irish’ as an educable race in the nineteenth century

chapter 3|21 pages

Purity and diversity as love for the nation

Being heard and contained in educational ‘evolution’

chapter 4|20 pages

Mediated blood transfusions and inoculations 1

Desirable/bogus immigrants and the warmth of the Irish educational community

chapter 5|22 pages

“Where is she from if she's not making her Communion?”

Unpacking community, integration and segregation in contemporary primary schooling

chapter 6|21 pages

How quality teachers' bodies are mobilised to feel about diverse abilities

PISA shock, policy motivation and finite inclusion

chapter 7|22 pages

Finding spaces within everyday attributions of ability and value

Contesting the ‘progressive’ school's colonisation of learner experience

chapter 8|20 pages

The ‘ebb and flow’ of racist micro-aggressions

Un/doing everyday uses of and relations between learner bodies