Lifelong learning, subjectivity and the totally pedagogised society

Authors

  • Stephen Ball University of London

Keywords:

Lifelong learning, governmentality, mothering, self-help

Abstract

The lifelong learner is a much over-burdened and over-determined social subject within current education policy and within some current versions of social theory. Lifelong learning indeed is subject to a constant stream of over blown policy statements and lifelong texts are saturated with policy fictions. These statements and texts sketch the outlines and some dimensions of what may be a new social totality, of which lifelong learning is a significant component. This paper explores some of the major elements of this new social totality and is organized around a trajectory of lifelong learning and focuses in particular on three “moments” or scenarios of learning and subjectivity: the pre-school learner and “total mothering”; the post-compulsory learner and workfare society; and the adult learner and “self-help”. Across these moments four inter-weaving discursive themes are identified: enterprise, responsibility, trainability and commodity.

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Author Biography

Stephen Ball, University of London

Meus principais áreas de interesse estão em análise a educação política e as relações entre educação e política de educação e classe social. Eu dar para estas questões as ferramentas e os conceitos de "sociologia política" e em particular os métodos de Michael Foucault e Pierre Bourdieu. Em 2008, eu estava envolvido no lançamento do BERA Teoria Social e Educação SIG.

Published

2013-06-27

How to Cite

Ball, S. (2013). Lifelong learning, subjectivity and the totally pedagogised society. Educação, 36(2), 144–155. Retrieved from https://revistaseletronicas.pucrs.br/ojs/index.php/faced/article/view/12886

Issue

Section

Dossier - Biopolitics, governmentality and education