ABSTRACT

This book explores Marxism and related political-economic theory, and its implications for education around the world, as seen in the history of the journal Educational Philosophy and Theory. As such, it illustrates the evolution of political-economic changes across societies, as they have been brought to bear within the academic field and in the journal, through the exploration of typical and noteworthy articles examining political-economic themes over time.

In the early decades of Educational Philosophy and Theory, only a few works can be found focused on Marx’s work, Marxism, and related themes. However, since the mid-1990s, Educational Philosophy and Theory has published many articles focused on neoliberalism and educational responses to theories and policies based on political-economic perspectives. This collection serves to showcase this work, exploring the way Marxist, neoliberal and other related political-economic theories have been applied to educational discussions among philosophers and theorists of education in the history of Educational Philosophy and Theory.

As a collection, this book provides a glimpse of a dramatically changing world, and changing scholarly responses to it, during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This collection can therefore be useful to scholars interested in better understanding how changes to the political economy have intersected with those in education over time, as well as the diverse ways scholars have approached and reacted to a shifting landscape, considering views ranging from Marxist to Post-Marxist, to neoliberal, and beyond.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Marxism, neoliberalism and beyond in educational philosophy and theory

chapter Chapter 2|16 pages

Radical defeatism

chapter Chapter 3|15 pages

State education service or prisoner's dilemma

The ‘hidden hand’ as source of education policy 1

chapter Chapter 5|16 pages

Neo-liberalism and hegemony revisited

chapter Chapter 6|15 pages

The restructuring of China's higher education

An experience for market economy and knowledge economy

chapter Chapter 8|14 pages

Implications of the My School website for disadvantaged communities

A Bourdieuian analysis

chapter Chapter 9|8 pages

The incompatibility of neoliberal university structures and interdisciplinary knowledge

A feminist slow scholarship critique

chapter Chapter 10|18 pages

Women, capitalism and education

On the pedagogical implications of postfeminism

chapter Chapter 11|14 pages

‘Intelligent capitalism’ and the disappearance of labour

Whitherto education?