Abstract

Rather than ignoring or criticizing students' vocational concerns, critical pedagogy can work on, in, and through them, thereby gaining persuasive credibility and simultaneously extending Paulo Freire's educational project. Following Freire's command to “rediscover power,” this article employs Michel Foucault's analysis of neoliberal biopolitics to imagine possibilities for both personal and systemic transformation.

Journal
Pedagogy
Published
2017-04-01
DOI
10.1215/15314200-3770085
Open Access
Closed

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (1)

  1. Pedagogy

Cites in this index (4)

  1. College English
  2. College English
  3. College Composition and Communication
  4. College English
Also cites 13 works outside this index ↓
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    American Literary History  
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    Quarterly Journal of Speech  
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  7. “Self-Appreciation; or, The Aspirations of Human Capital.”
    Public Culture  
  8. The Birth of Biopolitics: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1978–79
  9. “Why Has Critique Run out of Steam? From Matters of Fact to Matters of Concern.”
    Critical Inquiry  
  10. “An Attempt at a ‘Compositionist’ Manifesto.”
    New Literary History  
  11. “Paul Willis, Class Consciousness, and Critical Pedagogy: Toward a Socialist Future.”
  12. Acts of Enjoyment: Rhetoric, Žižek, and the Return of the Subject
  13. “Untested Feasibility: Imagining the Pragmatic Possibility of Paulo Freire.”
    College English  
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