ABSTRACT

In contemporary pedagogy, "class" has become one nomadic sign among others: it has no referent but only contingent allusions to similarly traveling signs. Class, that is, no longer explains social conflicts and antagonisms rooted in social divisions of labor, but instead portrays a cultural carnival of lifestyles, consumptions, tastes, prestige and desire, or obscures social conflicts through technicist accounts of incomes and jobs. 

Class in Education brings back class as a materialist analysis of social inequalities originating at the point of production and reproduced in all cultural practices. Addressing a wide range of issues – from the interpretive logic of the new humanities to racism to reading, school-level curricula to educational policy – the contributors focus on the effects that the different understandings of class have on various sites of pedagogy and open up new spaces for a materialist pedagogy and critical education in the times of globalization and the regimes of the digital.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|33 pages

Cultureclass 1

chapter 2|27 pages

Hypohumanities 1

chapter 3|21 pages

Persistent inequities, obfuscating explanations

Reinforcing the lost centrality of class in Indian education debates

chapter 5|20 pages

Racism and Islamophobia in post 7/7 Britain

Critical Race Theory, (xeno-)racialization, empire and education – a Marxist analysis 1

chapter 6|25 pages

Marxism, critical realism and class

Implications for a socialist pedagogy 1

chapter 8|21 pages

Class: the base of all reading 1

chapter |6 pages

Afterword

The contradictions of class and the praxis of becoming