Consuming Schools

£28.99

Consuming Schools

Commercialism and the End of Politics

Interdisciplinary studies History Philosophy Popular philosophy Education Educational strategies and policy Politics and government Central / national / federal government Indigenous people: governance and politics

Author: Trevor Norris

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Language: English

Published by: University of Toronto Press

Published on: 1st January 2011

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 256 pages

ISBN: 9781442660304


Overview

The increasing prevalence of consumerism in contemporary society often equates happiness with the acquisition of material objects. Consuming Schools describes the impact of consumerism on politics and education and charts the increasing presence of commercialism in the educational sphere through an examination of issues such as school-business partnerships, advertising in schools, and corporate-sponsored curriculum.

Historical and Theoretical Context

First linking the origins of consumerism to important political and philosophical thinkers, Trevor Norris goes on to closely examine the distinction between the public and the private sphere through the lens of twentieth-century intellectuals Hannah Arendt and Jean Baudrillard. Through Arendt's account of the human activities of labour, work, and action, and the ensuing eclipse of the public realm and Baudrillard's consideration of the visual character of consumerism, Norris examines how school commercialism has been critically engaged by in-class activities such as media literacy programs and educational policies regulating school-business partnerships.

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