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Giroux, Henry A. (1997). Pedagogy and the Politics of Hope: Theory, Culture, and Schooling. Reviewed by Marina Gair

 


Giroux, Henry A. (1997). Pedagogy and the Politics of Hope: Theory, Culture, and Schooling. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

290 Pp.

ISBN 0-8133-3274-5     (Paper)       $21.95

Reviewed by Marina Gair
Arizona State University

October 26, 1998

            Henry Giroux's Pedagogy and the Politics of Hope is a collection of essays published during the last two decades. It is organized according to three major themes central to pedagogy and schooling: Theoretical Foundations for Critical Pedagogy, Critical Pedagogy in the Classroom, and Contemporary Concerns. Giroux's energy is initially invested in analyzing the structural and ideological constraints on public schooling. He addresses the political aspects of pedagogy, and then broadens to social and moral matters relevant to schooling that involve the larger society. Each section represents a particular phase in his development: late 1970s reflections on social class and schooling rooted in neo-Marxism and the Frankfurt School theory, the development of "critical pedagogy" in the early 1980s, and various new approaches to understanding the pedagogical process in the 1990s.
            The first section, Theoretical Foundations for Critical Pedagogy, comprises four essays: "Schooling and the Culture of Positivism: Notes on the Death of History" (1979), "Culture and Rationality in Frankfurt School Thought: Ideological Foundations for a Theory of Social Education" (1982), "Ideology and Agency in the Process of Schooling" (1983); and finally, "Authority, Intellectuals, and the Politics of Practical Learning" (1986). Giroux pursues radical democracy by isolating the historical dynamics, prevailing hegemonic ideologies and structural forces that influence and shape the American educational experience. Most central for him are the epistemological, political, cultural, and social margins that confine and undermine knowledge and the process of schooling, and in particular the culture of what he calls positivism and technocratic rationality. He contends that this culture did not simply become the dominant ideological formation ex nihilo, but in fact evolved into a material force with oppressive features having important implications for the process of schooling. "This form of rationality," writes Giroux, "prevents us from using historical consciousness as a vehicle to unmask existing forms of domination as they reproduce themselves through facts and common-sense assumptions that structure our view and experience of the world. The logic of positivist thought suppresses the critical function of historical consciousness. For underlying all the major assumptions of the culture of positivism is a common theme: the denial of human action grounded in historical insight and committed to emancipation in all spheres of human activity. What is offered as a replacement is a form of social engineering analogous to the applied physical sciences. It is this very denial which represents the essence of the prevailing hegemonic ideology" (p. 12). Giroux charges that positivism, by ignoring the value of historical perspectives and thus contributing to the "irrelevance" of the past in understanding the future, freezes both human beings and history. His major aim has been to illuminate the workings of contemporary schooling by introducing into educational discourse cultural politics, notions of ideology, power, history, race, gender, and class struggle in order to illuminate the relationships among these factors and their relationships to the process of schooling.
            Giroux sees a passive conception of humanity implied by the perspective of technocratic rationality. "Central to this form of rationality in the curriculum field is the notion of objectivity and neutrality. Guided by the search for reliability, consistency, and quantitative predictions, positivist educational practice excludes the role of values, feelings, and subjectively defined meanings in its paradigm" (p. 19). In the positivist pedagogical model, Giroux finds that there is a place neither for social history nor the generation of personal meanings nor respect for individual potential. This "methodology madness" as he calls it, "is rampant in public school pedagogy and has resulted in a form of curricular design and implementation that substitutes technological control for democratic processes and goals" (p. 20). Thus, Giroux believes that the manner in which teachers view knowledge, teach students to view knowledge, and structure classroom experiences reflects an impersonal, universalized, ahistorical, context- free knowledge that is driven by a positivist ideological undercurrent.
            Giroux points to the work and insights of the Frankfurt School, existentialism, and new left thought as vital resources for undermining technocratic rationality and expanding the terrain for developing a reconstructed theory of pedagogy. Frankfurt School theorists on the whole rejected forms of rationality that subordinated human consciousness and adopted a perspective that supported critical thinking pursuant to individual emancipation and social change. They conceptualized schools as cultural sites that mirror societal organization and further explored the relationship between ideology, power, and class and how these shaped the process of schooling. Giroux credits the Frankfurt School with dismantling traditional and uncritical views of socialization in American education, and thereby making way for new types of inquiry. Frankfurt School theorists have helped us see schools as political rather than neutral, and in the process have revealed schools to be sites of cultural reproduction with a significant role in reinforcing and legitimizing the dominant social relations and their ideologies.
            In the second section, Critical Pedagogy in the Classroom, Giroux develops his theory of border pedagogy with three essays; "Radical Pedagogy and the Politics of Student Voice" (1986); "Border Pedagogy in the Age of Postmodernism" (1988), "Disturbing the Peace: Writing in the Cultural Studies Classroom" (1993). Giroux tries to awaken not just educators but all Americans to create liberatory pedagogical possibilities through a radical form of "border crossing." Giroux proceeds to define and discuss transformative and emancipatory pedagogy and learning. Paramount to this discussion, he draws on the work of Paulo Freire and Mikhail Bakhtin, who articulate the notions of struggle, student voice, and critical dialogue, and he attributes central notions in the development of emancipatory pedagogy to these visionaries. He writes, "I believe that schools need to be reconceived and reconstituted as democratic counterpublic spheres as places where students learn the skills and knowledge needed to live in and fight for a viable democratic society. Within this perspective, schools will have to be characterized by a pedagogy that demonstrates its commitment to engaging the views and problems that deeply concern students in their everyday lives. Equally important is the need for schools to cultivate a spirit of critique and respect for human dignity that will be capable of linking personal and social issues around the pedagogical project of helping students become active citizens" (p. 143). Giroux writes that "the dominant school culture generally represents and legitimates the privileged voices of the white middle class and upper classes. In order for radical educators to demystify the dominant culture and to make it an object of political analysis, they will need to master the language of critical understanding. If they are to understand the dominant ideology at work in schools, they will need to attend to the voices that emerge from three different ideological spheres and settings: these include the school voice, the student voice, and the teacher voice" (p. 141). As pedagogical practice, border pedagogy underscores the need to challenge and resist existing boundaries of knowledge and create new ones. Thus, it is imperative to create classroom conditions that facilitate students' ability to speak, write, and listen in a "multiperspectival language". Within this discourse students are no longer marginalized but engaged as border-crossers who challenge, cross, remap, and rewrite borders as they enter into counter-discourse with established boundaries of white, patriarchal, and class-specific knowledge. Likewise, "border pedagogy provides opportunities for teachers to deepen their own understanding of the discourse of various others in order to effect a more dialectical understanding of their own politics, values, and pedagogy. What border pedagogy makes undeniable is the relational nature of one's own politics and personal investments. But at the same time border pedagogy emphasizes the primacy of politics in which teachers assert rather than retreat from pedagogies they utilize in dealing with the various differences represented by the students who come into their classes" (p. 158). In essence, teachers become border-crossers when they legitimize excluded social narratives, experiences and voices and make them available in the classroom. In this way, teachers enhance their own political, social and intellectual efficacy. Giroux urges educators to redefine their role from servants of hegemonic power to public and "transformative intellectuals" that reject dominant forms of rationality or "regimes of truth," and commit themselves instead to furthering equality and democratic life.
            Giroux also promotes the use of "border writing," which he describes as a form of border literacy in which students are engaged as active learners in analyzing popular texts to challenge disciplinary borders. Giroux has found that in his own practice "border-writing" is also an attempt to "get the students to learn from each other, to decenter power in the classroom, to challenge disciplinary borders, to create a borderland where new hybridized identities might emerge, to take up in a problematic way the relationship between language and experience, and to appropriate knowledge as part of a broader effort at self- definition and ethical responsibility" (p. 176). In Giroux's view, it is essential to make everyday experience "problematic and critical" by exposing its hidden political assumptions. For Giroux, this critical undertaking takes on an emancipatory purpose by empowering students to develop the "social imagination" and "civic courage" necessary for them to participate in their own "self- formation." Giroux also argues that students should develop a counter-discourse that challenges and critiques established models of Western culture. Instead of a common culture, he calls for the construction of a new common language, a democratic language.
            In the last section, Giroux examines contemporary issues including postmodernism and feminism, concentrating on cultural difference in the classroom. The essays of the last section include "Rethinking the Boundaries of Educational Discourse: Modernism, Postmodernism, and Feminism" (1990) and "Insurgent Multiculturalism and the Promise of Pedagogy" (1994). Giroux finds support in postmodernist and feminist theory for his vision of shaping academic disciplines and discourse through educational theory. What Giroux identifies as modernist sensibilities are by nature progressive and emancipatory. He writes that "postmodernism raises questions and problems so as to redraw and re-present the boundaries of discourse and cultural criticism. The issue that postmodernism has brought into view can be seen, in part, through its various refusals of all natural laws and transcendental claims that by definition attempt to escape from any type of historical and normative grounding. In fact, if there is any underlying harmony to various discourses of postmodernism, it is in their rejection of absolute essences" (p. 193). The criticism offered by contemporary theorists, argues Giroux, "provides an important service in assisting those deemed Other to reclaim their own histories and voices. By problematizing the dominant notion of tradition, postmodernism has developed a power- sensitive discourse that helps subordinated or excluded groups to make sense out of their own social worlds and histories while simultaneously offering new opportunities to produce political and cultural vocabularies by which to define and shape their individual and collective identities" (p. 198). Postmodernism, then, challenges the egocentricity of elite culture and legitimizes popular culture and everyday experience. Likewise, feminist positions "have challenged the essentialism, separatism, and ethnocentrism that have been expressed in feminist theorizing, and in doing so have seriously undermined the Eurocentric and totalizing discourse that has become a political straightjacket within the movement" (p. 205). Giroux does not dwell on the possible conflicts between certain forms of postmodernism and feminism, but rather focuses on how they complement one another and forge a practical partnership towards improving democratic life. Together, they offer emancipatory pedagogy a language that "offers educators an opportunity to develop a political project that embraces human interests that moves beyond the particularistic politics of class, ethnicity, race, and gender" (p. 226). "Central to such a politics and pedagogy," claims Giroux, "is a notion of community developed around a shared conception of social justice, rights, and entitlement" (p. 227). For Giroux, all this works in the service of democracy.
            Finally, in a new essay, "Intellectuals and the Culture of Reaganism in the 1990s," Giroux identifies the conservative logic of the Reagan era as a cultural revolution that has redefined the role of education. Giroux writes, "one tragic legacy of Reagan's cultural revolution is that youth, especially poor urban youths, have become scapegoats in the neoconservative attack on welfare, civil rights laws, and health care policies. Demonized in the press as thugs and criminals, young black males in particular have been blamed for the breakdown of public civility while young, unwed mothers have been targeted as the source of all social evils in American society" (p. 255). Instead, he argues, these must be understood as inherited ones that are shaped by larger historical conditions. He claims that schools did not do well under Reaganism, where "neoconservatives have attempted to make the public school an adjunct of the corporation, offering its services to the highest corporate bidder" (p. 255). The marketplace mindset has withered political movements and the priority of democracy in both the academic and public arena. Essentially, the role of education has been redefined in terms of "privatization and standardization" (p. 255). This conservative trend thwarts efforts to make schools democratic spheres. In opposition, Giroux protests that there has been a "consistent attempt to remove schools from their role in educating students as social subjects who can take up the burdens and responsibilities of democratic public life. Instead, neoconservatives have largely defined education using a monocultural and commercial logic by which pedagogy serves primarily to produce consumers" (p. 256). "When not demonized, youths are viewed as merely filling market niches in commercial culture that uses mass media, especially television, to sell young children and adolescents toys, clothes, and every other conceivable product" (p. 256). Mainstream political leadership, he believes, ignores these questions of culture, identity, power and social responsibility, thereby stifling any real discussion of such topics as hierarchy, exploitation, and multiculturalism.
            Against the rise of "corporate culture" and its push toward vocationalization of colleges of education, Giroux calls for the reconsideration and restructuring of the study of pedagogy within a cultural studies framework. He advocates a conception of educational policy that situates university education within a more expansive political and ethical discourse. For Giroux, such policies would "move away from an assimilationist ethic and the profoundly ethnocentric fantasy of a common culture to a view of national identity that includes diverse traditions, histories, and the expansion of democratic public life" (p. 268). Giroux makes an appeal for curricula that examine culture as it is actually lived rather than culture as it is "fixed" in the minds of certain elites. The establishment of Cultural Studies in the university is a political project that would develop what Giroux characterizes as an oppositional public sphere that should replace the established "fixed" disciplines with a scholarship of oppositional discourse. Such discourse legitimates rather than suppresses more radical forms of knowledge.
            Giroux suggests that educators should become vigorously involved in social criticism so as to return universities to their most important task: creating a public sphere in which citizens exercise power over their own lives and learning: "Whether in schools or in other cultural spheres, public intellectuals must struggle to create the conditions that enable students and others to become cultural producers who can rewrite their own experiences and perceptions by engaging with various texts, ideological positions, and theories. They must construct pedagogical relations in which students learn from each other, learn to theorize rather than simply ingest theories, and begin to address how to decenter the authoritarian power of the classroom. Students must also be given the opportunity to challenge disciplinary borders, create pluralized spaces from which hybridized identities might emerge, take up critically the relationship between language and experience, and appropriate knowledge as part of a broader effort at self-definition and ethical responsibility" (p. 263). Higher education should engage in political education by "teaching students to take risks, challenge those with power, honor critical traditions, and be reflexive about how authority is used in the classroom" (p. 265). Such a political education would allow students to understand the workings of power and how it shapes their growth as critical citizens. Otherwise, "Lacking a political project, the role of the university intellectual is reduced to a technician engaged in formalistic rituals unconcerned with disturbing and urgent problems that confront larger society" (p. 265).
            The collection under review reaches beyond traditional educational theory and into truly cross- disciplinary territory. By doing so, Giroux has broadened our understanding of the relationship between schooling and political life by challenging the traditional roles of students, teachers and schooling by conceptualizing new "spaces" for learning. Giroux thus helps democratic educators with one of their most pressing tasks: to develop a cogent critical language for articulating how race, class, gender, power and ideology impinge upon educational practice and experience.
            In terms of style, there has always been controversy surrounding Giroux's use of language, particularly over linguistic clarity, or more appropriately, the utter lack of it. This collection of essays is continued evidence of the thorny, formidable, vigorous, and restless (to the point of frustration) kind of discourse that has been attributed to Giroux. Unlike some of his earlier essays which were more a pastiche, or accessible conversation pieces, this book is dragged down by an undertow of frustrating, alienating discourse that does not call upon the participation of the "average" reader. While he makes no apologies for the complexity of his style, arguing that "the call for clarity suppresses difference and multiplicity, prevents curriculum theorists and other educators from deconstructing the basis of their own linguistic privilege, and reproduces a populist elitism that serves to deskill educators rather than empower them" (Giroux, 1992, p. 220), his opaque language unduly burdens the reader. In that sense it hampers his proclaimed emancipatory cause. Through a language that is "critical, oppositional and theoretical," Giroux believes educators can be moved from deskilled, silenced, and subordinate positions, to a realm of discourse in which they labor intellectually at educational criticism. But for teachers and students, his words appear as "all talk"--"talk" that is predominantly addressed at intelligentsia. To question, define, and challenge --to become political activists in the spirit of Giroux, some sense of accessibility to his points is necessary. Giroux's work would be enhanced by what Habermas has called "nonrepressive dialogue" in which meaning and reality can be mutually negotiated. In this collection, Giroux does not provide for more "interpersonal" interaction with the reader.
            Thus, his work would have been significantly enriched with sharper visions of how teachers as "transformative intellectuals" can survive in the classrooms and how is it that they are to transform classrooms from what seem to be pseudo-democratic spaces to authentic "democratic public spheres" in the face of constraints and competing forces. Namely, these often contradictory agendas include what preservice teachers were heavily schooled and socialized into believing upon entrance into their preparation program, what colleges of education attempt to redefine and inculcate in terms of expectations, and what the market in which teacher preparation programs are situated demands. Positioning his call for teachers to become transformative intellectuals within the context and interplay of these forces would better articulate how his vision might be realized. This means speaking not so much from an "intangible," theoretical, sociopolitical orientation, but from the stance of a teacher, perhaps personalizing his writing to include his own classroom experiences as a university teacher or that of others who survive within such established power structures.
            Giroux's work lacks more focused inquiries into teachers' experiences or the undertaking of more ethnographic perspectives within institutional settings that might inquire into teacher, student, and institutional interactions. Participant observation, photography, and interviews with students and faculty to uncover and describe the nature of the teaching and educational experience from a more emic or insider's perspective would make more informed theory. In doing so, the answers to questions Giroux never asks, such as: 'how can my vision take effect where I direct it most?' or 'how can I help educators translate the ideals I espouse into real situations?' or 'how is a critical education possible?' can be answered more realistcally and helpfully. Educators cannot become the political activists Giroux wants unless he is willing to make himself more comprehensible to them on their own terms. Giroux projects a sort of militancy that pushes the reader (unaware of what position propels his distinct style) to take residence somewhere in the "margins"of the book, precisely where Giroux is calling for us not to rest. On occasion he appears to leave the lofty academic tower he has often denounced (but in which he has taken residence throughout the book), making himself almost accessible to the reader. One is left wanting more of these refreshing interludes.
            The discourse remains largely on a scholarly and theoretical plane, directed predominantly at intelligentsia, and would probably be marginally enlightening to K-12 practitioners who need to understand the historical construction of contemporary schooling and the theory of critical pedagogy. It does not provide concrete or tangible pedagogical "practices" for critical pedagogy or on becoming critical educators; therefore, its "usefulness" to K-12 practitioners is going to be marginal. This does not mean that a critical pedagogy needs to be explained exclusively in instrumental terms, but rather that it should be presented more as a dialogue and less as a repressive monologue. Leaving the discussion exclusively on a scholarly and theoretical plane somehow depreciates the transformative nature of pedagogy or what has traditionally been and continues to be the commitment, focus and intent of Giroux's work.
            While the essays are organized in terms of Giroux's theoretical progression, the sections, and in fact, the essays can be read independently and each serves as forceful and convincing evidence of the need to transform pedagogy into an emancipatory project. While Giroux is among the few scholars who have ventured beyond his counterparts in contributing to the interrogation of pedagogy, schooling, and educational theory, he still fails to address the potential consequences of some of his positions. Namely, if higher education becomes characterized as a "political education," does this mean teachers and professors should dissent whatever the cost (essentially facing Socrates' fate of altruistic suicide)? How do they yield to established structures and market realities, and at the same time not abandon his pedagogies of hope and possibility? Furthermore, Giroux needs to be careful that in so boldly driving his own critiques, he does not contribute to the sorts of relationships he fights against. In keeping with the spirit of Giroux, we must then question if critical reflection in educational frameworks offsets hegemonic relations and reverses the course of social reproduction towards autonomy. There is ample room left in Giroux's book for discussing hegemonic relations and how these relations function in the educational experience, yet the remedies Giroux defends need broader and more informed reflection. Gadamer's objection of the critical reflector alludes to that to which Giroux devotes little time: "the critique of ideology overestimates the competence of reflection and reason. Inasmuch as it seeks to penetrate the masked interests which infect public opinion, it implies its own freedom from any ideology; and that means in turn that it enthrones its own norms and ideals as self-evident and absolute" (Gadamer, Hermeneutics and Social Science, p. 315). Gadamer's point is that critical conversation and reflection are not fully possible because we cannot escape hermeneutical constraints, which includes hegemonic relations. Essentially, no critical pedagogical discourse can be benign and embraces some element of politics. Thus, Giroux's work embodies some inherent contradictions, namely underdeveloped questions of hermeneutics and critical theory in and of itself as well.
            Giroux's is a utopian vision of schools and children that would have to be preceded by several small "revolutions" were it actually to occur. But for the pedagogically weary, Giroux's hope and vision of what is possible, serves as a source of strength. The essays of this book reflect trademark Giroux: an attempt at pedagogical empowerment. While Giroux can be sharply contested on a number of fronts, his critics ought to agree that he ranks as one of the most scathing critics and provocative educational thinkers of our time. In these essays, Giroux gives compelling support to his ongoing emancipatory project.

Reference

Giroux, Henry A. (1992). Language, Difference, and Curriculum Theory: Beyond the Politics of Clarity. Theory Into Practice, 31, 221-227.

About the Reviewer

Marina Gair
Marina Gair is a PhD student in the Division of Educational Leadership & Policy Studies in the College of Education at Arizona State University. She specializes in Social and Philosophical Foundations of Education.

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