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Falling Rate of Learning and the Neoliberal Endgame
About this book
The current neoliberal mutation of capitalism has evolved beyond the days when the wholesale exploitation of labor underwrote the world system's expansion. While "normal" business profits plummet and theft-by-finance rises, capitalism now shifts into a mode of elimination that targets most of us--along with our environment--as waste products awaiting managed disposal. The education system is caught in the throes of this eliminationism across a number of fronts: crushing student debt, impatience with student expression, the looting of vestigial public institutions and, finally, as coup de grace, an abandonment of the historic ideal of universal education. "Education reform" is powerless against eliminationism and is at best a mirage that diverts oppositional energies. The very idea of education activism becomes a comforting fiction. Educational institutions are strapped into the eliminationist project--the neoliberal endgame--in a way that admits no escape, even despite the heroic gestures of a few. The school systems that capitalism has built and directed over the last two centuries are fated to go down with the ship. It is rational therefore for educators to cultivate a certain pessimism. Should we despair? Why, yes, we should--but cheerfully, as confronting elimination, mortality, is after all our common fate. There is nothing and everything to do in order to prepare.
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Yes, you can access Falling Rate of Learning and the Neoliberal Endgame by David Blacker in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Education & Education Theory & Practice. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Topic
EducationSubtopic
Education Theory & PracticeTable of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Epigraph
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 Endgames
- 2 The tendency of the rate of profit to fall
- 3 Upward instability and downward elimination
- 4 Educational eliminationism I: Student debt
- 5 Educational eliminationism II: Student voice
- 6 Educational eliminationism III: Universal schooling disassembled
- 7 Fatalism, pessimism, and other reasons for hope
- Notes