Mobilizing Anger for Social Justice: The politicization of the emotions in education
2007; Routledge; Volume: 18; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/10476210601151516
ISSN1470-1286
Autores Tópico(s)Teacher Education and Leadership Studies
ResumoIn this paper, I use feminist and poststructuralist discourses to suggest that the politicization of anger in education is not only inevitable but also desirable. In particular, an analysis of anger in education may offer certain critical advantages, including a better understanding of the importance of being angry in political terms. As various educational approaches nowadays seek indiscriminately to silence anger in the name of 'emotional intelligence'—and thus, de‐politicizing it—an attention to the political aspects of emotions in education is extremely valuable. Thus, I argue that emotions, and particularly anger, are central to the exercise of power relations in the classroom, and challenge the dominance of instrumental/rational accounts about anger replacing them with the recognition of anger as political. Also, I clarify some of the conditions that generate angry feelings as ambivalence and explore the transformative possibilities that this ambivalence creates. This work is important because there has been little attention to anger in relation to educational politics and social justice education.
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