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Schooling as a Ritual Performance
Towards a Political Economy of Educational Symbols and Gestures
Schooling as a Ritual Performance
Towards a Political Economy of Educational Symbols and Gestures
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Description
One of the most compelling ethnographies of school ever written, "Schooling as a Ritual Performance" has for over a decade made its mark among educators, sociologists, and those seeking to understand the cultural meaning of classroom practices. Written by one of the major world figures on the educational left, "Schooling as a Ritual Performance" is a pioneering study of the partnership between capitalism and religion and the educational offspring it produces. Not since Paul Willis' "Learning to Labor" has an educational ethnography about schooling so pushed the limits of current social theory.
Now, in a new edition to this classic text, McLaren engages with some of the latest anthropological thinking and presents readers with a powerful manifesto for critical ethnography in the coming millennium.
Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Education as a Cultural System
Chapter 3 The Setting
Chapter 4 The Structure of Conformity
Chapter 5 The Antistructure of Resistance
Chapter 6 Making Catholics
Chapter 7 Summary, Recommendations, and Reflections
Chapter 8 Coda
Chapter 9 Afterword
Product details
Published | Jul 28 1999 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 430 |
ISBN | 9780847691968 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
Series | Culture and Education Series |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Those who have been waiting for a successor to Jonathon Kozol may find in this book an alternative source of anthropological criticism of schooling.
Richard Fenn, Journal Of Ritual Studies
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As a writer, (McLaren) combines the rare gifts of the astute theoretician with that of the storyteller in the manner celebrated by Walter Benjamin. . . . An impressive and original contribution to critical educational theory and practice. . . a startling insight.
Henry Giroux
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McLaren's study. . . stands at the pinnacle of ethnographic works.
Stanley Aronowitz, CUNY Graduate Center, author of From the Ashes of the Old: American Labor and America's Future
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Where (Paul) Willis draws his interpretation from culturalist Marxist work, McLaren incorporates some of these interpretations within a framework of analysis taken from the anthropological work of Victor Turner and others who stress the importance of symbol and ritual in the organization of institutions and culture. . . . McLaren is the first to apply these insights in such a thorough and detailed manner to the ordinary working of the school. The results are always illuminating.
Michael Apple
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. . . He helps us to see more clearly the nature of our lostness and the barely visible sparks of liberation.
David E. Purpel, Educational Theory
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Groundbreaking. . . brilliant. . .a tour de force.
Stephen Ball, London Times Higher Education Supplement