ABSTRACT

At a time when teaching and learning policy too often presents itself in a simplistic input-output language of measurable targets and objectives, The Affected Teacher explores the role played by emotionality in how professional life is experienced by school teachers. The book argues that, in the very highly organised and structured social spaces of public institutions, emotionality - or, more precisely, all that is included in the concept of ‘affect’ - needs to be recognised and validated, rather than ignored or pathologised.

It explores how neoliberal education policy seeks to mould professional subjectivities, relationships and practices; how teachers experience and ‘manage’ their feelings; and the role that affect plays in guiding either compliance with or resistance to often unpopular policy directives. Drawing on a rich body of original data comprising formal and informal discussions with a range of teachers, the case is argued for psychoanalytically and politically informed individual and group reflexivity, both as a form of professional and personal development and as a way of keeping alive alternative beliefs and understandings regarding the purposes of education.

The Affected Teacher is relevant to practising schoolteachers and to undergraduate and graduate students and academics involved in education related courses such as policy studies, education management and the sociology of education, as well as disciplines related to psychosocial studies and psychoanalysis.

part I|176 pages

Contexts and theory: reflexivity, psychoanalysis and empowerment

chapter 1|21 pages

Reflexivity and Psychoanalysis

chapter 2|17 pages

Discourse, Ideology and Affect

chapter 3|18 pages

Fear and Love

part II|120 pages

Repetition and transference: reflexivity as personal and professional development

chapter 4|14 pages

New Editions of Old Conflicts

chapter 5|19 pages

Affect, Communication and ‘Absence’

Performativity and anti-caring

part III|87 pages

Reflexivity, discourse and the affective pull

chapter 6|23 pages

Not Rocking the Boat

Virtuous pragmatism and the allure of normalcy

chapter 7|21 pages

The Loss and Return of the Happy Object

part IV|43 pages

Resistance and refusal: towards a reflexivity of the group

chapter 8|26 pages

Reflexivity and the Group

Validating affect, challenging hegemony