What is the role of education in a world where we no longer have a clear vision of the future and where the idea of a single, universal model of humanity seems like the residue of a bygone age? What role should educators play in a world where young people find themselves faced with deep uncertainty about their future, where the prospects of securing a stable, long-term career seem increasingly remote and where intensified population movements have created more diverse communities in which different cultures find themselves living side by side, no longer bound together by the belief that the other would eventually be assimilated into 'our' culture? Faced with the bewildering features of our liquid modern world, many young people are inclined to withdraw - in some cases into the online world of games and virtual relationships, in other cases into anorexia, depression, alcohol or even drug abuse, hoping to find shelter from a world perceived as more and more dangerous. Others launch into more violent forms of behaviour, like street gangs and the looting carried out by young people who have been excluded from the temples of consumption but are eager to participate in the ceremony. And all this happens while our politicians look on, uncomprehending and indifferent. In this short book Zygmunt Bauman - the leading social theorist of our liquid modern world, here in conversation with Riccardo Mazzeo - reflects on the predicament of young people today and on the role of education and the educator in a world where the certainties of our predecessors can no longer be taken for granted.
| ISBN | 0745661564 | | Pages | 100 | | ISBN13 | 9780745661568 (What's this?) | | Weight (grammes) | 206 | | Publisher | Polity Press | | Published in | Oxford | | Imprint | Polity Press | | Height (mm) | 211 | | Format | Paperback | | Width (mm) | 142 | | Publication date | 04 May 2012 | | Spine width (mm) | 13 | | DEWEY | 306.43 | | Academic level | Professional / Scholarly | | DEWEY edition | DC23 | |
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1. The crisis of contemporary education between mixophilia and mixophobia 2. Jose Saramago:"There are ways of being happy that are simply hateful" 3. Gregory Bateson and his third level of education 4. From ballistic missiles to the smart ones: from closure of mind to "permanent revolution" 5. The hundred years oak trees have grown from ridiculously minute acorns 6. Looking for a genuine "cultural revolution" 7. Depravation is the cleverest strategy of deprivation 8. It takes but a few minutes and a couple of signatures to destroy what took thousands of brains and twice as many hands and lots of years to build 9. The youth as a disposal tip for the excesses of consumer industry 10. The effort to improve mutual understanding is a prolific source of human creativity 11. The unemployed may always play lotto, don't they? 12. Disability, abnormality and minority as a political problem: the examples by Wells and Saramago 13. Being indignant is not enough for swarm-like ephemeral political groupings 14. The riots of defective consumers and the never-ending minefields 15. Richard Sennett: "Informal, open-ended cooperation is how best to experience difference" 16. From the Lacanian "discourse of the capitalist" to the Baumanian "discourse of consumerism" 17. Zizek and Morin: does religion necessarily have a monotheistic nature? 18. If even Proust's petite madeleine is exploited as the last resort for consumerism 19. On fuels, sparks and fires 20. On globalization coming of age
"Bauman's knack for placing things in context and accounting for that uneasy feeling you get from this or that current development makes [On Education] stimulating." Inside Higher Ed "When graduates can't find jobs, the bargain of commercialised education -- take out enormous student loans that will be repaid by your supposedly high salary later on -- breaks down. So worries the sociologist Bauman, in a perky and colourful written interview with the Italian publisher Mazzeo. Even so, Bauman remains hopeful about the 'openness' of mind ideally encouraged by schooling -- indeed, as he points out sharply, it is not 'practical' otherwise." Steven Poole, The Guardian

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