Globalisation and Educational Research
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Transcript of Globalisation and Educational Research
UNEARTHING THE FORCES OF
GLOBALISATION IN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
David R Cole
University of Western Sydney
Centre for Educational Research (CER)
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Abstract “The global system of post-industrial and newly industrializing
worlds produces scattered and poly-centered yet always profit-oriented power relations which function not so much by binary oppositions but in a fragmented and all-pervasive manner. The rhizomic or web-like structure of contemporary power, however, does not alter fundamentally its terms of application. If anything, power relations in globalization are more ruthless than ever,” (Braidotti, 2012, p. 169).
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Arjun ApparduraiIf globalisation is characterised by disjunctive flows that generate acute problems of social well-being, one positive force that encourages an emancipatory politics of globalisation is the role of imagination… On the one hand, it is through the imagination that modern citizens are disciplined and controlled—by states, markets, and other powerful interests. But it is also the faculty through which collective patterns of dissent and new designs for collective life occur. (p. 6)
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Cartographies… “What I am precisely concerned with,”
Guattari explained, “is a displacement of the analytic problematic, a drift from systems of statement [énoncé] and preformed subjective structures toward assemblages of enunciation that can forge new coordinates of interpretation and ‘bring to existence’ unheard-of ideas and proposals”
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4 division of the unconscious
The four divisions of the unconscious diagram deal with: 1) cut-outs of existential territories; 2) complexions of material and energetic flows; 3) rhizomes of abstract ideas and 4) constellations of aesthetic refrains. Perhaps more tangibly, one could say about these 4 zones that they are — i) the ground beneath your feet; ii) the turbulence of social experience; iii) the blue sky of ideas and; iv) the rhythmic insistence of waking dreams.
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The group
This idea concerns the passage from a ‘subjected group’, often alienated by globalisation, to a ‘subject group’, that is capable of making its own statements. The theme occurs throughout Guattari’s first book, 1972, Psychanalyse et transversalité: Essais d’analyse institutionnelle. La Découverte, Paris. For example in “Introduction à la psychothérapie institutionnelle.”
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Abstract machines Yet what the fourfold
diagrams try to map out are not just the latencies and possibilities of speech on the edge of an all-absorbing state of anti-conditioning and strikingly revolutionary action, but more specifically, the material situations and logical steps that draw subjectivity out of its containment and into unfolding, globalised flows and inter-relationships which are themselves reshaped through their collisions with ceaselessly mutating operational diagrams that Deleuze & Guattari (1988) called ‘abstract machines’…
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Escape routes… The point of this method of
participatory educational research is to resist, create, propose alternatives and to escape in terms of the evolving singularities of the group, despite the normalizing forces that are continually brought to bear on collectivism by aspects of contemporary capitalist society, e.g. the confinement of the bourgeoisie, or the oedipal family.
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Meta-modelling On the contrary, the
meta-modelling of this article works from within to make difference happen in each example, so globalised subjectivities are not essentialised, but realised in terms of the inter-relationships between examples and in the singularities of the examples themselves that have no relations
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Sudanese families in Australia
There has been extensive coverage in the Australian media and in the political arena about the ways in which the Sudanese have fitted in or otherwise into mainstream Australian society, and this coverage has not always been positive. See, for example, an ABC interview with the former Immigration Minister, Kevin Andrews, at: http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2007/s2057250.htm
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Diagram
i) the houses where the Sudanese currently live in Australia, which replicate the tribal and village spaces in the Sudan, and their convoluted journeys to get to these places from different regions in the Sudan, e.g. via Egypt; ii) the Sudanese community world, including the influences of Christian worship and their perspective on Australian social life taken from Australian media and their contact with Australians; iii) the idea of being Sudanese; iv) the aesthetics of becoming Sudanese-Australian.
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Literacies
Peer and youth literacies The literacy of synthetic time War literacies Oral literacies Tribal literacies Physical literacies
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Young Muslims in Australia on Facebook … 82% of the 15-18 age group asked said
that their primary focus on the Internet was to socialize. 63% of the 18-25 age group responded similarly, which points to the ways in which globalised social life is evolving under the influence of social media. The sample of 323 young Muslims was taken from the Sydney area, and the urban focus of the research prejudices the study in that all respondents should have access to computers…
Information Sources- Top five websites Muslim youth have consumed recently
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4 divisions of the unconscious 1) The Australia that the young
Muslims inhabit; 2) Muslim identity as it is portrayed in everyday life in Australia; 3) the notion of being a Muslim; 4) Muslim art, calligraphy, the style and essence of what it means to be a young Muslim.
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Literacies of Muslim youth
In terms of multiple literacies, the globalised young Muslims practise political, visual, rhetorical, religious and affective literacies online. The affective literacies are especially important to young Muslims using Facebook, as the affective contrast in environmental and digital realms is a powerful driver in their learning.
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The politics of affect
There is a politics of affect, which is produced through young Muslims using Facebook in Australia. By excluding affect from their calculations, one could say that neo-liberal civil society may be at odds with the often-violent resurgence in contemporary revolts against the state…
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History
In contrast, history may be cast as narrative that emphasizes regularity and predictability, in Massumi’s (2002) words, history comprises a set of “identified subjects and objects” whose progress is given “the appearance of an ordered, even necessary evolution… contexts progressively falling into order” (p. 218).
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Conclusion
The results from this study show how globalised identities determine difference and complex, divergent imaginations, which follow desires and form new ways of looking at the world from changing perspectives…