Moving on (part 2): Power and the child in curriculum history


Autoria(s): Baker, Bernadette
Data(s)

2001

Resumo

This paper is the second in a two-part series that maps continuities and ruptures in conceptions of power and traces their effects in educational discourse on 'the child'. It delineates two post-Newtonian intellectual trajectories through which concepts of 'power' arrived at the theorization of 'the child': the paradoxical bio-physical inscriptions of human-ness that accompanied mechanistic worldviews and the explanations for social motion in political philosophy. The intersection of pedagogical theories with 'the child' and 'power' is further traced from the latter 1800s to the present, where a Foucaultian analytics of power-as-effects is reconsidered in regard to histories of motion. The analysis culminates in an examination of post-Newtonian (dis)continuities in the theorization of power, suggesting some productive paradoxes that inhabit turn of the 21st-century conceptualizations of the social.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/89882/

Publicador

Taylor & Francis

Relação

DOI:10.1080/00220270117713

Baker, Bernadette (2001) Moving on (part 2): Power and the child in curriculum history. Journal of Curriculum Studies, 33(3), pp. 277-302.

Tipo

Journal Article