Questioning Educational Strategies:
The Challenges of Radical Pedagogy in
Discussions about Irish Traditional Culture
DRAFT - If you are going to cite this, I would prefer if you asked permission first. Thanks.
Anthony McCann
Crosbhealach an Cheoil/The Crossroads Conference
Magee College, Derry, 27th April, 2003
Abstract
Scholars in the field of radical pedagogy have critically
analyzed the role and effect of institutional education in our lives.
Thinkers such as Paolo Freire, Ivan Illich and others have highlighted
the negative contribution of many formal educational strategies to
relations of domination, oppression, and dehumanization.
The intense commodification of knowledge experienced in many
educational contexts, they argue, can be profoundly disempowering.
Illich calls for the disestablishment of the schooling system itself.
More recently, Prakash and Esteva make the case that formal education
constitutes an assault on the values of traditional communities. They
interrogate the relationship between the socializing power of education
and a globalizing capitalist ethos, arguing that "education" often
constitutes an insidious continuation of colonial ideologies.
In postcolonial Ireland such concerns must be taken seriously.
This paper is an opportunity to further interrogate the relationship
between formal education and the value systems of vernacular or
traditional culture in Irish contexts. By critically addressing
the issues raised by the increasing presence of formal educational
authorities in the discourses and practices of "Irish traditional
music", we can perhaps assess the effects of formal education on
the ways we understand "tradition" and "wisdom" in our lives.
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Introduction
Until now I have been most interested in the way that 'intellectual
property' is increasingly accepted as an authorised way to make
sense of our experience of 'Irish Traditional Music'. I have
analysed this acceptance as an example of the process and practices
of enclosure (McCann 2001, 2003), looking at the difference such
acceptance makes in our everyday lives. In this paper I turn to
the 'enclosure' implicated in the increasing acceptance of
formal education. I will draw on writings within the field of
radical pedagogy to suggest that formal education is furthering
the diminishment of present, powerful, humanising, and transformational
social dynamics in Ireland (and elsewhere). I will suggest that
formal education is, more likely that not, undermining particular
values that prioritize relationships in favour of others that don't,
often in the name of "Irish Traditional Music". I will also suggest
that we ourselves participate in these processes of diminishment
when we promote, accept, or ignore the effects of formal education
upon the ways we understand our lives and experience.
In a very straightforward fashion, the critique that I present in
this paper is also a critique of my own experience. I am a profoundly
institutionalised human being. This is perhaps more so in relation to
what I have considered "education" than in relation to anything else.
I have, in fact, spent twenty five years in formal, institutional
education: six of these in primary schools, seven in secondary school,
and twelve in third-level education. Within the context of this paper,
these years have also included four and a half years doing research
within the environment of the Irish World Music Centre at the University of Limerick. I am grateful
that my experiences as an academic have become personally challenging
over the last number of years, that I can no longer luxuriate in the
unexamined assumptions that I borrow from others. It's way past time
to bring the chickens home to roost.
Radical Pedagogy
A dictionary will probably tell you that pedagogy is 'the science
of teaching'. Radical pedagogy, explored elsewhere in this volume by
Stan Reeves, has grown out of the critical theory of the early Frankfurt
School of philosophy. Members of the Frankfurt School were profoundly
suspicious of any activities legitimised as "science". Such activities,
they argued, were likely to support and facilitate processes of
commodification and reification (where commodities seem to take on a life
of their own independent of human life) within capitalist consciousness
and related political systems of domination and oppression. Within this
tradition of social critique, proponents of radical pedagogy seek to
identify, understand, and critically evaluate the effects, consequences,
and power relations implicated by particular methods, modes, and
environments of teaching and learning in formal, institutional contexts.
That means assessing the effects that issue from particular kinds of
teaching and learning environments, gauging the consequences of
particular ways of thinking and doing in which we
participate as educators and as students.
Commodification
It is probably fair to say that a common claim among radical
pedagogists is that environments of formal education (classrooms,
lecture theatres, examination halls, schools, universities etc. etc.)
are sites where we learn to accept and reproduce the increasing
commodification of our experience. What does commodification mean?
Commodification (also commoditization) is a popular word among mainly
left-wing thinkers, due to Karl Marx's enthusiasm for the term
"commodity" as part of his anti-capitalist arsenal in Das Capital.
It is interesting that people who write about the process of
commodification concerns themselves almost exclusively with
attempts to quantify or define the qualities of 'commodities'
(e.g. Appadurai, ed. 1986). This seems to me a somewhat counterproductive
strategy. To focus on commodities-as-things, to focus on the exchange,
movement, access, control, and ownership of commodities in these
discussions is ironically to adopt a peculiarly commodifying approach.
I would further suggest that to consider commodification as primarily
or solely an economic issue is further to diminish its usefulness
as a concept in the analysis of areas such as education by making
commodification in educational contexts invisible. I don't
accept that commodification is a primarily or peculiarly
economic process, or that it overly concerns the abstract
exchange and movement of commodities.
The Effects of Commodification
So, in using the work of radical pedagogists to speak of the
commodifying effects of formal education, what do I mean by
commodification? In my own terms, commodification is when we
engage in strategies of 'closure' and 'separation' in the way
that we make sense of our experience. We close 'things' off, ring
'things' round, identify, isolate, eliminate variables, and thereby
separate, distance, things from other things, people-as-things
from other people-as-things, separate ourselves from acknowledgement
of many of the realities of our own experience. Think, for example,
of the way that thinking, speaking, and acting in military terms
(e.g "collateral damage") can keep actual effects on people in
social situations out of the picture. Commodification allows us
to not look too closely at 'what is actually going on'. By
focusing on 'things' we can distance ourselves from ethical
concerns, distance ourselves from the subtle and complex (power)
effects involved in what happens, and keep ourselves from thinking
about the character of our own attitude towards others and towards
our experience. As long as commodification dominates our experience,
we are unlikely to personally, ethically challenge ourselves, nor
personally, ethically challenge the negative effects of the dominant
authoritative voices wherever we are.
"Commodifying Environments"
It seems there are degrees of commodification,
depending on the circumstances. For example, the more
formal, rigid, or rule-bound the situation in which you
find yourself, the more commodifying the environment. Or,
the more unquestioned and unchallengeable authorities, roles,
positions, icons, or symbols in your experience, the more
commodifying will be your environment. I say 'commodifying' instead of
'commodified' to underline that commodification as I understand
it is a process in which we engage and participate. To speak of
a commodifying environment, then, is to speak of particular
situations in which the predominant ways we make sense of things
are in terms of closures and separations; often voiced in terms of
atomised things, abstract entities, isolated individuals, or bounded
communities. To reference Karl Marx, in commodification social
relations between people come to assume, it would seem, "the fantastic
form of a relation between things" (in Kamenka, ed. 1983:446-447).
That is, the relatedness that we experience as humans-among-humans
comes to be understood as separateness.
Alienation is a key point here. When the closure and separation
strategies of commodification become the dominant ways for us to
make sense of a situation, then that situation will be one in which
we are often alienated, and often unknowingly alienated, distanced
from ourselves, from our experience of relatedness. With increasing
commodification in the situations of our lives comes increasing
deferral to other people's authority for making sense of things,
increasingly unquestioned acceptance of the call to "Believe and
Obey". The commodifying environments of formal education are
among those that can contribute forcefully to the alienating and
disempowering commodification of our experience.
Paolo Freire and Ivan Illich
Commodification is an important focus for two key figures of
radical pedagogy: Brazilian Paolo Freire (1921-1997), and the
peripatetic Austrian Ivan Illich (1926-2002). Freire, was concerned
to reform the education system from within. Illich, on the other hand,
was a trenchant critic of 'the system' and sought to disestablish
formal schooling.
Paolo Freire engaged in a lifelong political project of humanizing
educational reform, which he lived in and through his own activities
as an adult educator in Latin America. Perhaps his most influential
publication was The Pedagogy of the Oppressed (1970). Working from
a postcolonial, Marxian perspective of oppression, struggle, revolution,
liberation, and freedom, Freire highlighted, for example, the
negative, dehumanizing effects of what he termed "deposit" or
"banking" education, where people are regularly viewed by
educators as containers that just need to be filled up with
information. In contrast to this, he drew attention to the
importance of dialogue in educational contexts, which holds out
the possibility to transform a classroom environment from an
authoritarian hierarchy to a transformational learning laboratory.
Freire also advocated situating educational activity in the
lived experience of participants. In this way, each person
can win back the right to 'say his or her own word', to 'name
the world'. This would happen, he claimed, in and through
acknowledgement of the social and political oppression in which
they find themselves, and this acknowledgement in turn arises from
a process of 'conscientization' or the awakening of 'critical
consciousness'. People, Freire taught, could then become aware
of possibilities for positive transformation in their lives.
Ivan Illich shared Freire's concern with the dehumanizing
effects of education, but Illich diverged from the Freirian
perspective, having less or, rather, no faith in the formal
educational systems he encountered. Illich's most notorious
publication on educational issues was Deschooling Society (1970).
Illich was, in fact, committed to a lifelong and sweeping critique
of institutionalization and professionalization in a variety of
fields, and to the disestablishment of formal educational systems.
Finger and Asún (2001:10) identify four aspects to Ivan Illich's
anti-institutional position (See Smith 2001).
Sometimes it has been assumed that Illich was a totalizing
rejectionist, condemning schools in an absolutist fashion.
Finger and Asún clarify his position: "Illich is not against
schools or hospitals as such, but once a certain threshold of
institutionalization is reached, schools make people more
stupid .... And more generally, beyond a certain threshold
of institutionalized expertise, more experts are
counterproductive - they produce the counter effect of what
they set out to achieve" (2001:11). Prakash and Esteva state
it more forcefully:
"Neither interested in improving the educational system
nor in shutting down schools, Illich offered evidence that saying
"NO" to education was a matter of decency and courage. Educational
alternatives or alternative schools simply cover up the fact that
the project of education is fundamentally flawed and
indecent ... (Illich 1996, 258-259)" (1998:97).
Prakash and Esteva
I recently read Escaping Education: Living as Learning within
Grassroots Cultures (1998) and was impressed by the
convictions of the authors, educationalists Madhu Suri Prakash and
Gustavo Esteva. As radical pedagogists, Prakash and Esteva follow on
in the tradition of Illich rather than Freire. To summarise, in
their book they make four key points:
I am interested in asking to what extent their critique
of formal education might be drawn into discussions about
formal education and "Irish Traditional Music". It is tempting
to follow Prakash and Esteva in identifying formal education
as the continuation of colonial ideologies within an Irish
postcolonial context, as perhaps the work of Declan Kiberd
in Inventing Ireland (1995) might also invite us to do. It seems to
me, however, that such an approach has more in common with
the simplistic oppressor/oppressed dichotomies that underlie
Freire's work than with the work of Illich. Similarly, the use
of categories such as "Western" and "First World" invite the
criticism, especially in the Irish context, that "It's more
complicated than that". As for formal education supporting a
globalizing capitalist ethos, I might well agree, but that is
very much a discussion for another day. The direction I want
to take here relates to their fourth point, that formal education
furthers the destruction of traditional communities by undermining
traditional values. Indeed, to restate the core point of this paper,
supported by my own social theory research in other areas,
the increasingly enthusiastic application of formal education
to "traditional culture" concerns is crowding out an ethical
system of powerful, humanising social dynamics in Ireland
(and elsewhere) by undermining relationship-centred values
in favour of others. This often happens in the name of
"Irish Traditional Music", and we participate in this
process when we promote, accept or ignore this. To come
to a clearer understanding of these dynamics I want to
now briefly consider the issue of "tradition".
The Naturalistic Metaphors of "Tradition"
"Tradition", like "culture", is a concept that
often facilitates debate, argument, and
worse (see, for example, Eisenstadt, ed. 1972; Shils 1981; Hobsbawm
and Ranger, eds. 1983; Handler and Linnekin 1984; Hellas, Lash,
and Morris, eds. 1996). Most discourses of "tradition" rely heavily
on what can be termed "naturalistic metaphors". Any metaphor that
is "naturalistic" is used in such a way that there is an assumed
equivalence between what actually happens and what the metaphor
says is the case. To use an extreme example, if I say someone is a
banana, and continue to talk and act as if the person is actually a
banana, then I am using that metaphor naturalistically. The two
most common metaphors used when people talk about "tradition" are
'tradition is an entity' and 'tradition is the passing of
things from one person to another'. The thinking runs as follows:
1) There is a thing called "tradition". It can be understood
as a bounded, discrete entity, and often refers to a stable,
sometimes fixed, store of core aspects of a group's identity.
Recourse is also taken to the Roman etymology of the term
"tradition", which suggests that "tradition" refers to a traditum,
any thing handed down from the past to the present, or
a traditio, which suggests the transferral of ownership
over a thing. If we do enough scholarly work, the case goes,
we can identify any particular "tradition" and characterize
it in terms of its contents and essential characteristics.
2) "Tradition" exists, but it's not a bounded, discrete
entity. Rather, "tradition" is a discrete process of
"handing down" or "transmission", in which discrete, bounded
entities of various sorts (e.g. folklore, folkways, symbols,
songs, tunes, stories etc. etc.) are passed down from one
person to another, usually "from generation to generation".
3) “Tradition” exists, but it’s a discrete process as well as being some sort of entity.
“Tradition” works as an agent in our lives, in the manner of an “invisible hand,” similar to the
invisible hand of the market. “Tradition,” understood in this manner, can often be assumed to have a
life of its own (“Living Tradition”), can often be assumed to evolve (“The Evolution of Tradition”),
and can also often be assumed to exercise aesthetic judgement (“Tradition-as-aesthetic-filtration-process”).
It has become commonplace in anthropology, sociology, cultural studies, and
folklore to draw attention to the inadequacies of thinking about experience in
terms of bounded entities. Life, thankfully, is more complicated than that. To
insist upon understanding “tradition” as an entity or as a process of entity
transaction, or even as a processual entity, is to participate in the construction of reified commodities,
whereby we are encouraged to think of “tradition” or the “units of transmission” as somehow having a transcendent,
stable existence independent of the uncertain lives we lead and experience. It may be comfortable to think this way,
but they aren’t actually bananas. Nevertheless, academics and other analysts often use the term “tradition” in
either or both of these ways, dazzling us with terminological halls of mirrors, blinding us with shifting
meanings and marshy conceptualization. We are often convinced that such naturalistic metaphorical excursions
are valid, accurate ways of speaking in analytical ways about reality by virtue of their supposedly legitimate academic history.
These naturalistic metaphorical constructions of "tradition"
are profoundly commodifying in terms of the abstract understandings
they afford us of our experience. Both versions rely heavily on
the existence of discrete, bounded entities, entities which we
construct in and through the intersection of strategies of closure
and separation. As a consequence, discussion about "tradition"
in these terms tends to revolve around issues of access to, and
control and ownership of the entities that constitute "tradition".
In other words, discussions generally concern 'resource management',
or rather, "tradition management". As with any commodifying way of
speaking about experience, such approaches frequently leave actual
experiences unarticulated, as we keep actual effects on people in
social situations out of the picture. We avoid looking too closely
at 'what is actually going on'. To repeat, By focusing on 'things'
we can keep ourselves from thinking too critically about the character
of our own attitude towards others and towards our experience.
We can, often naďvely, persist in thinking that there is
necessarily an equivalence between what actually happens
and the ways we talk about what actually happens.
Re-evaluating "Tradition"
I'm very fond of something that Sunday Business Post journalist
Tom McGurk once wrote in the context of a discussion of the term
"traditional": "While it doesn't matter what you call it, it does
matter what it is supposed to mean" (1995:25). So, let me
turn it around. I want to start not with things, but with the
way that I (we?) make sense of life. On the basis of previous
research, presented in detail in Beyond the Commons (2003), I would
suggest that we each negotiate our experience with the aid of
working assemblies of ways of thinking and ways of doing
(I refer to these in previous work as "structures of expectation").
We use many different terms to refer to these: for example, habits,
routines, norms, guidelines, principles, procedures, protocols,
belief systems, philosophies, ways of life, rules, training,
rituals, standards, laws, and the list goes on. I would
further suggest that these working assemblies of ways of
thinking and ways of doing are often considered specifically
within a context of community (where, with my theoretical hat on,
I understand community as expectational resonance in social interaction).
When this happens, we refer to these 'working assemblies' with
terms such as "convention", "custom", "education", "culture", or
"tradition". Experience of these working assemblies varies from
person to person. They run the gamut from being gently guiding
and loosely provisional, to being highly-directive and deeply
engrained (very much in the domain of duty, obligation, and
absolutes). How a person experiences these working assemblies
depends on the circumstances they find themselves in, and their
attitude to those circumstances. To discern the more hardened
'working assemblies' in your own experience, what Prakash and
Esteva refer to as "arrogant particularisms" (1998:2),
ask yourself: "What am I willing to argue about?" or
"How often do I use the word 'should'?"
If "tradition" might be one way to speak of ways of thinking and
doing in our experience, then, it seems to me, not so helpful to
abstractly define "tradition" as a universal analytic category
that somehow refers to timeless entities that are separate from
experience. It might not be so important, then, to argue what is
or isn't "tradition" or "traditional", but rather to ask what ways
of thinking and doing are influential in my, your, people's experience.
It would be a terrible shame if by focusing on the words "tradition"
and "traditional" we managed to evade such a question in favour of
the commodifying allure of verbal games. What I believe to be
helpful, particularly in the light of persuasive rhetoricians
who deploy the terms "tradition" and "traditional" to serve
very particular agendas, is to ask for a little specificity:
'Whose ways of thinking and doing?', 'In what circumstances?',
'In the promotion of which values?', 'With what effects?'.
A Powerful Politics for Being Human
Prakash and Esteva make the case that formal education furthers
the destruction of "traditional communities" by undermining "traditional
values". In light of the above discussion, to use the terms
"traditional" or "education" as analytic categories is, for me,
almost entirely unhelpful without looking specifically at the particular
social circumstances we are referring to, which people are thinking
the thinking and doing the doing, what exactly they are thinking and
doing, and with what effects. This approach to analysis is personally
demanding, requiring constant vigilance against overstatement and
overgeneralization. That said, I wish to leave four questions hanging:
Prakash and Esteva speak of "traditional values" in terms of
a "commons": "... the children of a community, pursuing the promises
of education, systematically learn to forget the languages of their
commons and their communities" (1998:8), and again: "However
passionately committed to cultural diversity, the classroom
must necessarily be the cemetery of sensibilities cultivated
in commons and communities ..." (1998:26). A little care is
called for here, however. The term "commons" is most often a
defensive concept, called upon in the context of a perceived
threat of encroaching and commodifying enclosure. This is clearly
how the term is used by Prakash and Esteva. There are, however,
generally two different understandings of the term 'commons':
On the basis of research done and research still to do, I now
suggest that what many of us have long referred to as "traditional
culture" in Ireland (and elsewhere) is often the second of these,
a particular character of social life which arises in particular
circumstances from a general and personal orientation in which
relatedness and relationship are not only acknowledged but fostered
and facilitated. I think of certain house ceilidhs I've been to
in the company of extended family, for example, or some of my
best evenings in the company of friends. It is sometimes hard
for people unfamilar with such social dynamics to accept that
there are ways of thinking and ways of doing that are not
commmodifying, that do not foster and facilitate commodifying
attitudes, but for those who have experienced the transformational
potential of such circumstances the dynamic couldn't be more real.
It's not that you won't find people with commodifying attitudes in
such circumstances. These days you probably will. But what is
important is that such strategies are just inappropriate to the
uncommodifying circumstance. Crucially, if commodifying strategies
begin to dominate the situations we find ourselves in then the
possibilities for an uncommodifying character of social interaction
are diminished; closures and separations become par for the course,
with the negative effects of commodification going along for the ride.
I think it's good to take this away from being an abstract
discussion about social dynamics, to ground what I'm saying in some way.
To do this I am simply going to give a randomly-selected list of
provisional principles which I have come across as "wisdoms",
that is, emotionally-healthy, humanizing ways of thinking and doing.
In my experience, these are not inconsistent with the uncommodifying
attitudes of which I speak. This isn't by way of prescription. It's not that
I think these are principles you should follow, simply that I have found them helpful,
and you may too. Where did I learn them? From other people,
to state the oft-forgotten obvious. From my parents and their
parents before them. From people I have met and admire. One of the
joys of my work as someone who studies anthropology is that I
get to talk to people, read what people have written, learn
from people, and it's my job. No-thing was "passed down" or
"transmitted". They simply speak of ways in which I can orient
myself in my experience in relationship to my experience. These
are some of the "traditions" that I would like to dominate my life:
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