Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies Culture and ...
Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies Culture and ...
Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies Culture and ...
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156 R. Soetaert et al.Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011perspectives <strong>and</strong> concepts from cultural studies as foci in existingcourses.In this article we focus on our work in teacher education. Ourstudent-teachers are studying or have a degree in history, literature,linguistics, or the arts. So they don’t come innocent or illiteratein our teacher training department. They all come with a wealth<strong>of</strong> previous knowledge <strong>and</strong> experience in their particular discipline.Each bring a mixture <strong>of</strong> personal, social, educational <strong>and</strong>disciplinary perspectives to the teacher education department.Our course can be described as a site where different disciplinarytraditions are confronted with each other. It is also a site wheretheory <strong>and</strong> practice intersect because we are forced to addressnot only the theory <strong>of</strong> teacher preparation, but also teacher practiceas well as the issues that confront our current teachers.The following is how we would describe ourselves: one is in hisfifties (the writer), one is in his forties (the teacher or the do-er),one is in his thirties (the researcher) <strong>and</strong> the others—their namesare not mentioned here—are the younger assistants in theirtwenties (researchers but also film-musicians <strong>and</strong> especiallycomputer-geeks=specialists).In what follows, we describe <strong>and</strong> problematize a few centralconcepts in teacher education: cultural literacy, representation ingeneral, <strong>and</strong> disciplines as representations in particular. We focuson the curriculum as a representation or as a contact zone. And weillustrate the theory with some practical vignettes on the representation<strong>of</strong> teachers <strong>and</strong> literacy, environmental literacy, <strong>and</strong> theliterary canon. As a result <strong>of</strong> this confrontation <strong>of</strong> theory <strong>and</strong>practice in teacher education we try to describe new roles forteachers inspired by cultural studies. We end with the question:what did we learn?CULTURAL LITERACYWhere do we begin our teaching? We have introduced the concept<strong>of</strong> literacy as a main perspective to start our reflection about whatis happening today in education. Indeed our students will be confrontedwith what is worth teaching <strong>and</strong> learning. But what exactlydo we mean when we talk about cultural literacy?We start by introducing traditional conceptions <strong>of</strong> cultural literacy.However, rather than presenting these as given, we problematizedtraditional concepts utilizing advances from such fieldsas cultural studies <strong>and</strong> with multiliteracies. Both perspectives haveproblematized our ideas about traditional literacy. The debate canbe summarized as a conflict between conservative <strong>and</strong> progressive
<strong>Culture</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Pedagogy</strong> in Teacher <strong>Education</strong> 157Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011perspectives on the curriculum or by the question: what is worthteaching (skills <strong>and</strong> content)?Let us take a concrete example from language <strong>and</strong> literatureeducation. The traditional perspective is embedded in a classicalhumanistview <strong>of</strong> education deeply inspired by the model <strong>of</strong> Latin<strong>and</strong> Greek: studying grammar <strong>and</strong> vocabulary in order to read=translate the classical texts. This formula was translated formother tongue education: traditionally we teach the national st<strong>and</strong>ardlanguage (focus on book-culture), the national history, <strong>and</strong>the national canon. Teachers teach students a cultural memorypretending it is their memory, that students should share <strong>and</strong> evenlove their past—the best <strong>of</strong> the Nation.The teacher transfers the culture <strong>of</strong> the past known by theadults to a younger generation. This transmission is also basedon the idea that culture is homogeneous <strong>and</strong> coherent. The teacherknows what culture is, the students do not <strong>and</strong> are even willing toaccept the cultural norms <strong>of</strong> the adults. So the pupil appears as anempty vessel <strong>and</strong> knowledge as fundamentally realist.REPRESENTATIONWhat did we learn from cultural studies or—better—from the cultural<strong>and</strong> linguistic turn? Probably that cultural memory is alwaysmediated in representation as delegation or as description. In thecase <strong>of</strong> representation as delegation we are confronted with thequestion <strong>of</strong> ‘‘who has the right to represent whom in instances inwhich it is considered necessary to delegate to a reduced number<strong>of</strong> ‘representers’ the voice <strong>and</strong> power <strong>of</strong> decision <strong>of</strong> an entiregroup’’ (da Silva 1999, 9).In the case <strong>of</strong> representation as description, we are confrontedwith the question <strong>of</strong> ‘‘how different cultural <strong>and</strong> social groups areportrayed in the different forms <strong>of</strong> cultural inscription: in the discourse<strong>and</strong> images through which a culture represents the socialworld’’ (da Silva 1999, 9). Of course both dimensions are linked:‘‘Those who are delegated to speak <strong>and</strong> act in name <strong>of</strong> an other(representation as delegation) govern, in a way, the process <strong>of</strong>presentation <strong>and</strong> description <strong>of</strong> the other (representation asdescription). He who speaks for the other controls the forms<strong>of</strong> speaking about the other’’ (da Silva 1999, 9).More <strong>and</strong> more we problematize the authority <strong>of</strong> representation.<strong>Cultural</strong> memory has become a site <strong>of</strong> struggle, in Freudianterms, for some, a trauma, in Marxist terms for others, a (false)ideology, <strong>and</strong> so on. The most important thing is that we realizethat what we teach is a representation <strong>and</strong> construction. If it is
158 R. Soetaert et al.Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011constructed, then it is subject to manipulation. And if we realisethis manipulation we can change things for the better.So, what is represented <strong>and</strong> who is representing whom, inwhat ways, for what purpose, <strong>and</strong> with what outcome, havebecome central issues. Teachers have to wonder—together withGerald Graff: ‘What should we be teaching—when there is no‘‘we’’?’ (Graff 1988, 149). And ‘we’ can even wonder ‘whose culture’?(Frith 1998). If teachers argue that they bring their pupilson higher grounds, they have to wonder: ‘‘whose higher grounds?’’(Bruner 1986, 142).These questions also penetrate the discourse <strong>of</strong> our institutionsleading to: ‘‘Whose university? Whose museum?’’ (Danto2000). It becomes clear that these critical question marks complicate<strong>and</strong> trouble theory <strong>and</strong> practice.DISCIPLINES AND REPRESENTATIONSLet us focus again on our concrete example <strong>of</strong> language <strong>and</strong>literature teaching. As we have argued, the literary canon isan interesting case-study to test our thinking about cultural literacyin general. Some <strong>of</strong> us still believe in the nineteenth-centuryArnoldian discourse: the canon is indisputably ‘‘the best thathas been thought <strong>and</strong> known in the world’’, or at least ‘‘the best <strong>of</strong>the West’’. <strong>Cultural</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>—amongst other disciplines—problematizes this gr<strong>and</strong> narrative <strong>and</strong> confronts us with a morepluralistic, democratic definition <strong>of</strong> culture. <strong>Cultural</strong> studiesteaches us that culture is ordinary, culture is a whole way <strong>of</strong> life(Williams 1958).Sociology teaches us about the so-called neutral definition <strong>of</strong>culture. Bourdieu,—for example—insists on issues <strong>of</strong> power inculture, makes us realize that culture is distributed unequally.Anthropology makes us aware <strong>of</strong> the fact that there is no suchthing as human nature independent <strong>of</strong> culture (Geertz 1973, 49).Discourse analysis teaches us that language makes no senseoutside discourse <strong>and</strong> there are different discourses (Gee 1996,ix) or cultural practices (Fairclough 1992) in, <strong>and</strong> with which,we create meaning. Poststructuralist, feminist, <strong>and</strong> postcolonialtheories criticize the dominant discourses <strong>and</strong> plead for spacesfor confrontation <strong>and</strong> emancipation.Critical or radical pedagogy raises questions about how cultureis related to power, calls for resistant readings, oppositionalpractices. There is also a call for teachers to become ‘‘resistantintellectuals challenging symbolic violence’’ or ‘‘transformativeintellectuals,’’ ‘‘to insert teaching <strong>and</strong> learning directly into thepolitical sphere by arguing that schooling represents both a
<strong>Culture</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Pedagogy</strong> in Teacher <strong>Education</strong> 159Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011struggle for meaning <strong>and</strong> a struggle for power relations’’ (Giroux<strong>and</strong> McLaren 1986, 215). Empowerment is the inspirational guide:the need for people to speak affirmatively <strong>and</strong> critically <strong>of</strong> theirown histories, traditions, <strong>and</strong> personal lives.Describing what all <strong>of</strong> these disciplines are doing, makes usrealize, on the one h<strong>and</strong>, how difficult it is to synthesize an essentialmission <strong>and</strong> on the other h<strong>and</strong>, how all these disciplines sharecommon ideas. You can test this empirically by presenting apaper—the same paper—in conferences <strong>of</strong> all these disciplines.The only thing you have to do is (with your word processor) ‘‘find’’<strong>and</strong> ‘‘replace’’ your central concept (for example using literacy, culture,or discourse as the buzzwords). You should <strong>of</strong> course adoptyour rhetoric to the context, refer to other founding fathers=mothers (although all these disciplines share a lot <strong>of</strong> FoundingFathers: Foucault, Bourdieu, <strong>and</strong> Barthes, for example, can beused everywhere).The boundaries <strong>of</strong> all these disciplines have become unclear.They operate in a contested space somewhere between the liberalarts=humanities <strong>and</strong> the social sciences. They share something:a linguistic, cultural, anthropological, sociological, ethnographic,<strong>and</strong> semiotic ... turn. These adjectives are more or lesssynonymous.RHETORICIf we had to choose from all these adjectives, the best way to synthesizeall these turns could be to refer to the rhetorical turn. Wethen have to take into account that there is also a turn in rhetoric:a turn from ‘‘a pejorative to an honorific term’’ (Enos <strong>and</strong> Brown1994, ix, quoted in Fleming 1998, 169). In comparing rhetoricwith educational practice, Fleming observes the relative failure <strong>of</strong>the rhetorical revival at the level <strong>of</strong> undergraduate education: ‘‘asa coherent <strong>and</strong> attractive course <strong>of</strong> study, ‘rhetoric’ remainsunrevived’’ (1998, 169).Indeed, all <strong>of</strong> us (well, people-like-us) have become a kind <strong>of</strong>‘‘homo rhetoricus’’ becoming self-conscious about language. Probablya lot <strong>of</strong> us could agree with Burke’s saying: ‘‘a way <strong>of</strong> seeing isalso a way <strong>of</strong> not seeing’’ (Burke 1935, 49). Rhetorians—likeBurke—have taught us that all orientations, ways <strong>of</strong> looking atthe world, can be considered rationalizations. All human actionsare driven by rhetoric or the use <strong>of</strong> language <strong>and</strong> symbols ‘‘for purposes<strong>of</strong> cooperation or competition’’ (Fleming 1998, 170).For teachers this implies that they have to develop a metaawareness<strong>of</strong> dominant cultural practices <strong>of</strong> their own <strong>and</strong> others.Teachers should learn to ‘‘denaturalize <strong>and</strong> make strange what
160 R. Soetaert et al.they have learned <strong>and</strong> mastered’’ (New London Group 1996, 86).What does that imply for the curriculum?In what follows we will discuss the kind <strong>of</strong> curriculum thatemerges from the perspectives we discussed focusing on the curriculumas a contact zone.Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011CURRICULUMWhat should the new curriculum look like? The simple idea—thecurriculum teaches the facts—should be fundamentally problematized.Indeed, we can be enlightened by using a CS spotlight: thecurriculum itself is a representation <strong>of</strong> facts. For this reason, thecurriculum should be revised in the light <strong>of</strong> the crisis <strong>of</strong> representation<strong>and</strong> interpretation. A postmodern crisis: ‘‘an uncertaintyin the very centre <strong>of</strong> the epistemologies that once governed withsuch confidence the modern project <strong>of</strong> domination: <strong>of</strong> nature,<strong>of</strong> the world, <strong>of</strong> society’’ (da Silva 1999, 7).The curriculum <strong>and</strong> the classroom becomes a site <strong>of</strong> struggle.We should problematize the old curriculum <strong>and</strong> the knowledge<strong>and</strong> pedagogy it suggests. Indeed, if we teach literature, art or history,part <strong>of</strong> teaching these disciplines implies ‘‘teaching the conflicts’’in these fields ‘‘to recognize the existence <strong>of</strong> such conflicts<strong>and</strong> try to foreground whatever may be instructive in them withinthe curriculum itself’’ (Graff 1987, 252). For example, teaching theliterary canon inevitably confronts us with the question: ‘‘how dowe institutionalize the conflict <strong>of</strong> interpretations <strong>and</strong> overviewsitself?’’ (Graff 1987, 259). A possible answer could be to re-organizethe curriculum as a contact zone.CONTACT ZONEPratt (1991) argues that the contact zone can be a space to breakdown the marginalization <strong>of</strong> the non-dominant literacy=culture. Inthe contact zone ‘‘cultures meet, clash, <strong>and</strong> grapple with each other,<strong>of</strong>ten in contexts <strong>of</strong> highly asymmetrical relations <strong>of</strong> power, such ascolonialism, slavery, or their aftermaths as they are lived out in manyparts <strong>of</strong> the world today’’ (Pratt 1991). Pratt also refers to the contactzone as ‘‘models <strong>of</strong> community that many <strong>of</strong> us rely on in teaching <strong>and</strong>theorizing’’ (ibid). What do the ‘‘pedagogical arts <strong>of</strong> the contact zone’’imply? They imply a shift from theory to narratives, from one Gr<strong>and</strong>Narrative to multiple narratives: ‘‘exercises in storytelling <strong>and</strong> in identifyingwith the ideas, interests, histories, <strong>and</strong> attitudes <strong>of</strong> others;experiments in transculturation <strong>and</strong> collaborative work <strong>and</strong> in thearts <strong>of</strong> critique, parody, <strong>and</strong> comparison (including unseemlycomparisons between elite <strong>and</strong> vernacular cultural forms; the
<strong>Culture</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Pedagogy</strong> in Teacher <strong>Education</strong> 161Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011redemption <strong>of</strong> the oral; ways for people to engage with suppressedaspects <strong>of</strong> history (including their own histories); ways to move into<strong>and</strong> through rhetorics <strong>of</strong> authenticity; ground rules for communicationacross lines <strong>of</strong> difference <strong>and</strong> hierarchy that go beyondpoliteness but maintain mutual respect; a systematic approach to theall-important concept <strong>of</strong> cultural mediation’’ (Pratt 1991). The dominantpower structures avoid the contact zone because it threatens thehierarchy that maintains their imaginary community’s dominance;in a contact zone the dominant literacy=culture is challenged by theclash with the ‘‘Other.’’Bizzell (1994) introduced the concept <strong>of</strong> the contact zone inthe teaching <strong>of</strong> literature, thereby challenging the traditionalchronological-linear organization: ‘‘Studying texts as they respondto contact zone conditions is studying them rhetorically, studyingthem as efforts <strong>of</strong> rhetoric’’ (Bizzell 1994, 168). This reconceptualizationinvolves bringing texts <strong>and</strong> perspectives together to organizea productive dialogue (Bizzell 1994, 165). In other words,students learn from underst<strong>and</strong>ing another person’s point <strong>of</strong> view,<strong>and</strong> come to ‘‘see’’ their culture not only from their own perspectivesbut also from the perspective <strong>of</strong> outsiders. In the contact zonestudents can ‘‘examine texts which foreground <strong>and</strong> critique differentcultural groups’ attitudes toward a common issue....’’ (VanSlyck 1997, 155). We organise a dialogue between differentdiscourses as Bakhtin suggests: dialogism does not allow theauthority <strong>of</strong> one’s speech but confronts it with other voices. Thecontact zone could be close to the ‘‘Third Space’’ <strong>of</strong> Homi Bhabha(1994, 206): a space for ‘‘enunciation <strong>of</strong> cultural difference’’—not based on the ‘‘exoticism <strong>of</strong> multiculturalism or the diversity <strong>of</strong>cultures, but on the inscription <strong>and</strong> articulation <strong>of</strong> culture’shybridity’’ (Bhabha 1994, 38).We can also refer to the borderl<strong>and</strong> theories or border pedagogiesintroduced by Giroux: ‘‘The pedagogical borderl<strong>and</strong>s whereblacks, whites, latinos, <strong>and</strong> others meet [<strong>and</strong> such sites] demonstratethe importance <strong>of</strong> a multicentric perspective that allowsteachers, cultural workers, <strong>and</strong> students to not only recognizethe multilayered <strong>and</strong> contradictory ideologies that construct theirown identities but to also analyze how the differences within <strong>and</strong>between various groups can exp<strong>and</strong> the potential <strong>of</strong> human life<strong>and</strong> democratic possibilities’’ (Giroux 1999, 175).Whether conceptualized as contact zones, a third space, or theborderl<strong>and</strong>, in such zones we can problematize our representations<strong>and</strong> thematize these problems in the curriculum. What thismeans is that our pr<strong>of</strong>ession has to redefine its object <strong>of</strong> study<strong>and</strong> use its techniques to interpret <strong>and</strong> evaluate ‘‘a variety <strong>of</strong>cultural texts’’ <strong>and</strong> zones (Bérubé 1998, 25).
162 R. Soetaert et al.Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011We are cognizant <strong>of</strong> the fact that considerable work remains tobe done to develop materials <strong>and</strong> an approach that is appropriatefor undertaking pedagogy as work in the contact zone. In our teachertraining we are in the process <strong>of</strong> developing such a curricularapproach (<strong>and</strong> there are <strong>of</strong> course lots <strong>of</strong> other examples all overthe world). We became aware that the model <strong>of</strong> pedagogy we areevolving is creating a turn in education at the site at which wework, a turn ‘‘From comfort zone to contact zone’’ (Gaughan2001, 1).In what follows we present a few vignettes based on projectswe developed for <strong>and</strong> with teachers—inspired by the ‘cultural orrhetorical turn’ focusing on the following themes: the representation<strong>of</strong> teachers, environmental literacy <strong>and</strong> the literary canon.VIGNETTE: TEACHERS AND LITERACY REPRESENTED?One <strong>of</strong> the possible ways to make students aware <strong>of</strong> the politics <strong>of</strong>representation is to confront them with the ways—for example—inwhich ‘teachers’ are represented in literature, movies, advertising,television, <strong>and</strong> so on. In our teacher training course we invitestudents to collect material from different media in whichteachers <strong>and</strong> literacy practices <strong>and</strong> events are represented.In terms <strong>of</strong> texts we have engaged students in discussions onBernard Shaw’s Pygmalion <strong>and</strong> its Hollywood version, My FairLady. Both works can be described as literacy narratives: storiesin which people become culturally literate. Such stories haveexplicit images <strong>of</strong> schooling, <strong>of</strong> the relation between teacher <strong>and</strong> student,<strong>of</strong> the confrontation <strong>of</strong> teachers’ culture <strong>and</strong> youth culture,<strong>and</strong> so on. In Pygmalion, Shaw thematizes, dramatizes, <strong>and</strong> indeedproblematizes the whole process <strong>of</strong> literacy acquisition, confrontingus with a central problem <strong>of</strong> literacy today, namely, which<strong>of</strong> the divergent conceptions <strong>of</strong> literacy, conservative or progressive,are to be utilized in teacher education. Eldred <strong>and</strong> Mortensencapture the contrast cogently when they observe that ‘‘the right<strong>of</strong>fers a vision <strong>of</strong> literacy programs that make assimilation secure<strong>and</strong> complete. Conversely, the left posits a version <strong>of</strong> literacy that,short <strong>of</strong> political revolution, always results in the unfinished, thedisplaced’’ (Eldred <strong>and</strong> Mortensen 1992, 534).Popular culture is apparently fascinated by the culture <strong>of</strong>teaching <strong>and</strong> learning in general <strong>and</strong> the relation between teachers<strong>and</strong> students in particular, as is evident from the production <strong>of</strong>films such as Educating Rita (a 1983 film by Lewis Gilbert, showinganother pygmalion adaptation), Dead Poets Society, DangerousMinds, Good Will Hunting, <strong>and</strong> so on. All these moviescreate literacy myths <strong>and</strong> a kind <strong>of</strong> Hollywood Curriculum:
<strong>Culture</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Pedagogy</strong> in Teacher <strong>Education</strong> 163Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011‘‘... good teachers are projected on the screen as bright lights inschools <strong>of</strong> darkness.’’ (Dalton 1999, 22). Representations <strong>of</strong> howteachers <strong>and</strong> students behave are created in literacy myths. It isnot because some <strong>of</strong> these movies are popular that we shouldn’ttake them seriously. On the contrary, Giroux argues, ‘‘it is preciselybecause <strong>of</strong> its popularity <strong>and</strong> widespread appeal that it warrantsan extended analysis’’ (Giroux 2002, 147). For a lot <strong>of</strong> cultural studiescritics, popular film creates a kind <strong>of</strong> public pedagogy inwhich behaviour <strong>and</strong> attitudes are created—consciously or unconsciously(Giroux 2002, 11).We wanted to make our student-teachers aware <strong>of</strong> the culturalconstructions <strong>of</strong> their pr<strong>of</strong>ession. They collaborated in an on-lineenvironment discussing a lot <strong>of</strong> examples <strong>of</strong> scenes in whichteachers—literacies—are (re)presented in films, novels, cartoons,<strong>and</strong> so on.Linked to this project on literacy narratives, we invited our studentsto also discuss articles in mass media—in newspapers <strong>and</strong>magazines—about ‘‘cultural literacy.’’ Again, we created an on-lineforum discussing issues <strong>of</strong> literacy. The main aim was to reconstructthe public debate about the future <strong>of</strong> literacy. Whose representationsare dominant? Whose interests are served by suchrepresentations <strong>and</strong> such readings? Our students were confrontedwith a ‘‘culture <strong>of</strong> complaint’’ about the level <strong>of</strong> literacy in schools,the level <strong>of</strong> literacy <strong>of</strong> their pupils, the level <strong>of</strong> their own literacy,<strong>and</strong> so on. It seems an ongoing debate between conservative(back-to-basics) <strong>and</strong> progressive perspectives on education.VIGNETTE: ENVIRONMENTAL LITERACYIn this project we focused on environmental literacy or on the discourse<strong>and</strong> rhetoric (main focus on art, fiction) in which nature<strong>and</strong> the environment is constructed <strong>and</strong> represented. The crisis<strong>of</strong> representation can be described as a result <strong>of</strong> the conflict aboutwho is entitled to define what we mean when we refer to an environmentalcrisis. The idea that nature is a social constructiondefined by relations <strong>of</strong> power among discourses <strong>and</strong> communities(biology, economics, arts, etc.) confronts us with questions suchas: Whose Nature? Whose Sustainability? (Soetaert <strong>and</strong> Mottart2003); <strong>and</strong>: ‘Whose Knowledge? Whose Nature?’ (Escobar 1998).Nature is described as a contested site, ‘‘a vast network <strong>of</strong> sites<strong>and</strong> actors through which concepts, policies, <strong>and</strong> ultimately cultures<strong>and</strong> ecologies are contested <strong>and</strong> negotiated’’ (Escobar1998). In The Country <strong>and</strong> the City, Raymond Williams (1973)makes us aware <strong>of</strong> how different times have constructed different
164 R. Soetaert et al.Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011perspectives on nature or have created ‘‘environmental rhetoric’’ or‘‘environmental discourse.’’We developed teaching material focusing on the construction <strong>of</strong>nature in art <strong>and</strong> fiction (using novels, painting, movies, touristbrochures, etc.): the construction <strong>of</strong> national l<strong>and</strong>scapes (forexample the English l<strong>and</strong>scape), the construction <strong>of</strong> the ‘coast’ asa tourist resort, <strong>and</strong> so on (Soetaert, Top, <strong>and</strong> Eeckhout 1996;Bishop et al 2000).Each culture, region, country, <strong>and</strong> language-community seemsto foster a construction, a stereotype <strong>of</strong> a typical l<strong>and</strong>scape. So weintroduced a new kind <strong>of</strong> L<strong>and</strong>eskunde, <strong>Cultural</strong> <strong>Studies</strong> inlanguage teaching deconstructing the traditional, romanticizedrepresentations (Soetaert <strong>and</strong> Van Kranenburg 1998).The questions we can ask from the perspective <strong>of</strong> the socialsciences <strong>and</strong> the arts are: how environmental discourse isproduced <strong>and</strong> circulated through mass media, how nature isrepresented in art, how l<strong>and</strong>scapes are changed through thetourist’s gaze (Bishop et al 2000; Soetaert et al 1996).One <strong>of</strong> the most interesting ways to study <strong>and</strong> illustrate theanthropological turn we have been dealing with is to focus on ‘traveling’<strong>and</strong> ‘tourism.’ Indeed, the anthropological perspective can bedescribed as a result <strong>of</strong> the fact that Europeans, as Europeans,travelled to other parts <strong>of</strong> the world, they had two different butinterrelated responses to the other cultures <strong>and</strong> peoples theyencountered. One <strong>of</strong> those responses was to regard the new locations<strong>and</strong> peoples as ‘‘resource’’ to be exploited through colonization.The other was to face <strong>and</strong> attempt to address the fact that‘‘culture’’ is plural, that the cultures <strong>of</strong> the people they encounteredwas substantially different from theirs <strong>and</strong> that this difference hadto be engaged. The concerns <strong>of</strong> anthropology emerged in theRenaissance, transformed into a discipline in the 19th century<strong>and</strong> today has become an anthropological turn influencing allhuman <strong>and</strong> social sciences.In contemporary times the discourse <strong>and</strong> praxis <strong>of</strong> the encounterwith difference has shifted from colonialism to tourism. However,the play on difference <strong>and</strong> the other as exotic remains. Theanthropological turn was an important part <strong>of</strong> our project as evidentin the fact that a central concept we engaged was the ‘gaze,’with a special focus on the tourist’s gaze—the changes in the nature<strong>of</strong> travel <strong>and</strong> leisure in tourism (Urry 1990). We focused on‘traveling’ <strong>and</strong> invited our students to develop teaching materialin which different perspectives on <strong>and</strong> in traveling were thematized(in a webquest project: Make Your World). Special attention wasgiven to photography as a social <strong>and</strong> cultural practice. The cameramay not lie but it certainly constructs ‘‘reality.’’
<strong>Culture</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Pedagogy</strong> in Teacher <strong>Education</strong> 165Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011VIGNETTE: CANONIn this last vignette we focus on a topic we already mentioned—theteaching <strong>of</strong> language <strong>and</strong> literature. Our central idea in this aspect<strong>of</strong> the project—based on the theoretical perspectives discussed inthe introduction—is that the teaching <strong>of</strong> literature can benefit froma reconceptualization. Rather than taking for granted the notion<strong>and</strong> workings <strong>of</strong> the canon, the very idea <strong>of</strong> a ‘‘List <strong>of</strong> Great Books,’’is to be critiqued <strong>and</strong> problematized from a cultural studiesperspective.We developed material around canonical works such asRobinson Crusoe <strong>and</strong> Don Quixote—works that play an importantrole in our cultural memory. A whole network <strong>of</strong> ‘re-writings’ <strong>and</strong>‘re-readings,’ adaptations, <strong>and</strong> interpretations has been wovenaround these works. Many readers were socialized into the literaryculture by these stories. And very <strong>of</strong>ten—we learned from ourresearch—they have not read the original but rather only knowthe stories in the form <strong>of</strong> adaptations such as children’s stories,film, cartoons, <strong>and</strong> songs.In our project we worked with our students to reconstruct anetwork <strong>of</strong> references, adaptations, <strong>and</strong> re-writings; this entire networkconsists <strong>of</strong> drawings, paintings, music, film, video, <strong>and</strong> cartoonsthat all play a central role, adding meaning to the writtentext. We also researched what pupils know about these canonicalworks from their own (very <strong>of</strong>ten popular) culture. For example,Robinson Crusoe cannot be read properly apart from the children’sstories, the popular stories <strong>and</strong> films that play upon the theme <strong>of</strong>men or women deserted on an isl<strong>and</strong>, a desert, the sea ... even ‘inspace.’ The robinsonade has become a literary genre in itself. Thenovel can be described as a contact zone because Robinson Crusoehas become a vehicle for philosophical discussion about the majorthemes in our society: capitalism (Marx uses the story to explaincapitalism), feminism (there was no place for women, except forthe ‘typecast mother’), multiculturalism (there was no place forFriday, the savage in the margin), education, <strong>and</strong> so on. This perspectivecan be combined with the postmodern literary phenomenon <strong>of</strong>rewriting Western classics, thereby questioning their ideologicalpremises. Thus, the French author Michel Tournier (1967) ‘reverses’the relationship between Robinson Crusoe <strong>and</strong> his servant Friday,<strong>and</strong> the South African author J. M. Coetzee (1986) introduces a muteFriday—bereft <strong>of</strong> his ‘tongue.’ And we shouldn’t restrict ourselves to‘high’ cultural: there are Disney-esk versions <strong>of</strong> Robinson Crusoe<strong>and</strong> even computer games inspired by the story (Myst).By creating a contact zone we can problematize the canon <strong>and</strong>thematize critical questions about the novel confronting high <strong>and</strong>
166 R. Soetaert et al.Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011low culture, words <strong>and</strong> images. ... Even the isl<strong>and</strong> itself can bedescribed as ‘‘a site <strong>of</strong> contact between three cultures (English,Carib <strong>and</strong> Spanish) where his protagonist Crusoe finds meansto dominate all who l<strong>and</strong> on it’’ (Fulton 1994, 2).One <strong>of</strong> the central goals in our project was to help studentscome to the realization that culture can be described as a conflictover meaning <strong>and</strong> more specifically a conflict between variousdiscourses that claim to represent various perspectives.By introducing ideas from cultural studies we can make ourstudents realize that knowledge <strong>and</strong> culture are ever shiftingphenomena, which they do not only learn but shape themselves.Again, we want to argue that the best way to tackle today’s conflictsover culture is ‘‘to teach the conflicts themselves, making thempart <strong>of</strong> our object <strong>of</strong> study <strong>and</strong> using them as a new kind <strong>of</strong> organizingprinciple to give the curriculum the clarity <strong>and</strong> focus thatalmost all sides now agree it lacks’’ (Graff 1994, 8).TEACHER-AS-RESEARCHERIn all the projects we described we invited our students to design<strong>and</strong> implement teaching materials. This involved having themundertake partial kinds <strong>of</strong> research. We introduced actionresearch in our teacher training inspired by Elliott (1991): ‘‘It wasno longer simply a matter <strong>of</strong> producing materials for teachers to testin classrooms. It was also a matter <strong>of</strong> fostering the development <strong>of</strong>teachers’ capacities for self-reflection’’ (Elliott 1991, 19). Traineeteachersfocused their lessons <strong>and</strong> research on ‘‘what’’ <strong>and</strong> ‘‘how’’pupils came to know about particular cultural topics (as for exampleRobinson Crusoe, the l<strong>and</strong>scape, the nation—see the vignettes).Teachers taped their lessons <strong>and</strong> transcribed the oral interactionwith students. Apart from researching their own teaching, teachersalso uncovered the network <strong>of</strong> knowledge from their pupils.We pointed out to our students that in fact Robinson Crusoedid some research on his own teaching: ‘‘I began to speak tohim, <strong>and</strong> teach him to speak to me; <strong>and</strong> first, I made him knowhis name should be Friday. ... I likewise taught him to say Master,<strong>and</strong> then let him know, that was to be my name; I likewise taughthim to say yes <strong>and</strong> no, <strong>and</strong> to know the meaning <strong>of</strong> them’’ (Defoe1719, 161). A perfect description <strong>of</strong> traditional education. ButRobinson becomes more or less aware <strong>of</strong> the relation betweenpower <strong>and</strong> knowledge. He realises that in ‘‘laying things open’’ toFriday, he really informed <strong>and</strong> instructed himself ‘‘in many thingsI did not know, or had not fully considered before, but whichoccurred naturally to my mind upon searching into them for theinformation <strong>of</strong> this poor savage’’ (Defoe 1719, 282–283).
<strong>Culture</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Pedagogy</strong> in Teacher <strong>Education</strong> 167Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011Through a perspective based on cultural studies (combinedwith discourse analysis) we can deconstruct the things ‘whichoccur naturally to our mind.’ This meta-awareness implies introducingreflection in teacher education. A distinction can be madebetween two kinds <strong>of</strong> reflection: reflection can refer to lookingback on the first cycle <strong>of</strong> action (loop): how did I act? But reflectioncan go deeper <strong>and</strong> also focus on underlying values, assumptions,things which occur naturally.... This reflection is epistemologicalbut also influences the identity <strong>of</strong> the teacher.Indeed teachers have to test everything they more or less takefor granted, namely their discipline, their subject content, theirrole as a teacher <strong>and</strong> last but not least, their own identity. Teachersshould be willing to reconstruct discourses, to revise vocabularies.This perspective is very close to Rorty’s central idea that ifthe world <strong>and</strong> our identity are not constant, we are obliged to‘rediscribe’ it constantly. In his recent work Barker introducesWittgenstein as a founding father <strong>and</strong> Rorty as inspiring philosopherfor cultural studies. Barker describes cultural studies as ‘‘asymbolic guide or map <strong>of</strong> meaning <strong>and</strong> significance’’ (Barker2002, 5) or ‘‘inspirational guidebooks with consequences’’ (Barker2002, 5). So cultural studies can be a potential tool forintervention in the social world, however, it is not a form <strong>of</strong> directpolitical activity.Teachers should be interested in what is happening in culture:‘‘The educator as anthropologist must work to underst<strong>and</strong> whichcultural materials are relevant to intellectual development. Thenhe or she needs to underst<strong>and</strong> which trends are taking place inour culture. Meaningful intervention must take the form <strong>of</strong> workingwith these trends’’ (Papert 1980, 32). Indeed, teachers cannotafford to neglect—for example—the everyday life <strong>of</strong> their pupils.The teacher-as-anthropologist is another role, <strong>and</strong> ethnographyprobably is the best methodology for researching the practice<strong>of</strong> meaning-making. Apart from action research, we also invitedour students to read <strong>and</strong> to do cultural-studies inspired research(for example the representation <strong>of</strong> teachers, youth in literacy narrativesmainly in popular culture—see the vignette, for examples <strong>of</strong>simplified versions <strong>of</strong> ethnographic research on popular youthcultures).WHAT DID WE LEARN?By focusing on popular, mass culture <strong>and</strong> visual culture in the curriculum<strong>of</strong> teacher training, we could motivate our students whoare growing in an era when the mass media is a pervasive, taken
168 R. Soetaert et al.Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011for granted aspect <strong>of</strong> culture. This perspective motivates studentteachersas learners. As Donna Alvermann puts it, students today‘‘had experienced firsth<strong>and</strong> what it felt like to really ‘care’ aboutsomething being taught. Case in point... if teachers themselvescan get caught up in popular media texts <strong>and</strong> still learn, why wouldthey not extend the same opportunity (courtesy, even) to their students?’’(Alvermann interviewed by Alsup 2001). But Alvermannalso stresses the fact that she is not advocating that popularculture should become the only content <strong>of</strong> the new curriculum.Nor does she suggest that we should lure pupils ‘‘into the ‘oldcurriculum’ using something they enjoy, only to incorporate it inway that essentially spoil their pleasures’’ (Alsup 2001).We also became aware <strong>of</strong> a lot <strong>of</strong> problems as a result <strong>of</strong> introducingcultural studies perspective. At this moment, we are doinga research project about the reactions <strong>of</strong> our students to the introduction<strong>of</strong> cultural studies in their curriculum <strong>and</strong> about theirevaluation <strong>of</strong> the contact zone as a new kind <strong>of</strong> curriculum. Infact we tried to practice what we preach by introducing culturalstudies in our teaching <strong>and</strong> by organizing our curriculum as acontact zone (see the vignettes above). How did the studentteachersreact? Apart from positive reactions they also resistsome aspects <strong>of</strong> cultural-critical theory.Students seemed to be wrestling with different paradigms.Some <strong>of</strong> the reaction <strong>of</strong> the students mirrored the doubts <strong>and</strong> complexities<strong>of</strong> postmodern theory. If we ask our student-teachers toreflect upon <strong>and</strong> eventually to redescribe their theory <strong>and</strong> practice,their discipline <strong>and</strong> their identity, this can be liberating but it canalso be problematic, even humiliating or traumatic.One <strong>of</strong> the recurring problems signalled by student-teacher isabout the concept ‘critical.’ The adjective ‘critical’ is added to alot <strong>of</strong> our disciplines (e.g., critical cultural studies, critical literacy,critical theory, critical pedagogy). In our discussions with them,students repeatedly asked what difference the term ‘‘critical’’ madeto the discourse at h<strong>and</strong>, what is the difference suggested by ‘‘critical,’’what work does ‘‘critical’’ do, <strong>and</strong> what does it mean to undertakea ‘‘critical’’ version <strong>of</strong> or perspective on something? Criticalliteracy for example inspires us to ask a fundamental question:whose literacy? But when we embark on our critique somestudents start wondering: whose criticism? Everything becomespoliticized.It is precisely the political perspective <strong>of</strong> some cultural studiesscholarsthat creates ethical problems for some teachers. They thinkthey also have other responsibilities: to teach skills <strong>and</strong> knowledge,to prepare pupils for higher education, for society-as-it-is.The same problem arises with concepts as empowerment <strong>and</strong>
<strong>Culture</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Pedagogy</strong> in Teacher <strong>Education</strong> 169Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011pupil-centeredness. Introducing many perspectives on a particulartopic (implying taking seriously opinions <strong>and</strong> ideas... from pupils<strong>and</strong> students or empowering them) was considered problematic.Some students reacted with a very simple question: is it possibleto be wrong? If no interpretation or meaning can be privileged, whatis the role <strong>of</strong> teachers? What is the difference between power <strong>and</strong>authority? Where does emancipation, critique, empowermentend? Some students were wrestling with a contradiction: theinclusion <strong>of</strong> marginalized voices seems interesting but what aboutthe erosion <strong>of</strong> st<strong>and</strong>ards or the disappearance <strong>of</strong> shared knowledge?Another problem is about the way students relate to theirdiscipline. Critical Discourse Analysis <strong>and</strong> CS deconstruct thehistorically based definitions <strong>of</strong> disciplines in education. If werealize that disciplines are only tools or constructions <strong>and</strong> notnatural categories, we can indeed deconstruct certain practices(the reference to literature as an autonomous field is a nineteenthcentury construction). Realizing the relativity <strong>of</strong> disciplines doesnot necessarily imply that some (even a lot <strong>of</strong>) disciplinary knowledgeis no longer interesting. On the contrary students areconfronted with the fact that disciplines can be described aspowerful discourse communities who decide ‘‘who can think<strong>and</strong> say what to whom in what way, <strong>and</strong> who or what is excludedfrom discourse <strong>and</strong> knowledge’’ (Hodge 1990, 13).Many <strong>of</strong> our student-teachers also have a special relation withart because they believe that art really matters for the individualartist <strong>and</strong> appreciator <strong>of</strong> art as well as for society in general. Ifthe focus <strong>of</strong> CS is on redescription <strong>and</strong> redefinition, about a‘new way <strong>of</strong> seeing’ (Barker 2002), if there is move ‘‘against theory<strong>and</strong> toward narrative’’ (Rorty 1989, xvi) then we can wonder whysome art (indeed very <strong>of</strong>ten ‘high’ art) is not taken more seriously.Didn’t we learn from Sklovsky <strong>and</strong> others that art makes strangewhat is considered natural? Didn’t art slow down our perception<strong>and</strong> slow down the movement from perception to recognition?Didn’t Kundera <strong>and</strong> others plead for the importance <strong>of</strong> the‘wisdom <strong>of</strong> the novel?’For some students the perspective from critical theory leads toa never ending criticism or deconstruction. It leads to a kind <strong>of</strong>miserabilism or scepticism (e.g., Bourdieu, Foucault) with nosuggestion <strong>of</strong> positive possibilities. According to Bloom, there is‘‘one thing a pr<strong>of</strong>essor can be absolutely certain <strong>of</strong>: almost everystudent entering the university believes, or says he believes, thattruth is relative’’ (Bloom 1987, 24). It is precisely this relativismthat can be problematic for students. The cultural, rhetorical turnstrips away the foundational status <strong>of</strong> all knowledge <strong>and</strong> for some,this leads to a moral relativism or ‘‘anything goes’’ philosophy.
170 R. Soetaert et al.Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011By overstressing <strong>and</strong> repeating the critical perspectives, deconstructingstereotypes, some students feel overexposed with thesame repeated formula. We think we are confronting them withsomething new, but this is met with indifference. What is the bigdeal in teaching that the literary canon, or the national history isa construction? What is the point in showing that motherhood,love nationalism, youth...are cultural constructions? They don’tstop loving their mother, falling in love, getting homesick <strong>and</strong>feeling younger than their teachers.Sometimes teachers <strong>of</strong> cultural studies must feel like Chip inthe novel The Corrections by Michael Franzen (2002). Chip is a risingcultural studies star teacher at a small New Engl<strong>and</strong> college(very cliché in the representation <strong>of</strong> literature or cultural studiesteachers: he tries to write a screenplay <strong>and</strong> is involved in a loveaffair with one <strong>of</strong> his students). Well, this Chip—a Foucaultian—is deconstructing television commercials <strong>and</strong> wonders if hisstudents are not right in thinking: ‘‘there was nothing wrong withthe world <strong>and</strong> nothing wrong with being happy in it.’’SHARED KNOWLEDGEFrom a more philosophical perpspective, Bizzell is not surprisedthat students ask for more than scepticism <strong>and</strong> deconstruction:‘‘We are still nostalgically evoking the search for truth, only toannounce that truth cannot be found. We spend out time exposingtruth claims as historically, ideologically, rhetorically constructed;in other words, we spend out time in the activity called deconstruction’’(Bizzell 1998, 375).Precisely because teachers don’t feel at ease with some <strong>of</strong> theprogressive, critical perspectives inspired by critical theory <strong>and</strong>CS, they <strong>of</strong>ten return to pragmatic solutions, to a comfort zoneinstead <strong>of</strong> a contact zone. Back-to-basics <strong>of</strong>fers them nostalgiafor the good old past by putting the literary canon, the national history(with a positive perspective on the Founding Fathers) <strong>and</strong>grammar (<strong>of</strong> the st<strong>and</strong>ard language) back on the agenda (Hirsch1987; Bloom 1988). And Hirsch (1988) created a List <strong>Cultural</strong> Literacy:What Every American Needs to Know with an appendix.‘‘What Literate Americans Know.’’ He suggests a simple remedy:we have to teach again traditional ‘myths <strong>and</strong> facts’ described as‘the oxygen <strong>of</strong> social intercourse’ (Hirsch 1988, xii). Is such a quickfix reasonable? We think on the one h<strong>and</strong> the problems is morecomplex that back-to-basic suggests, but on the other h<strong>and</strong> thereis some truth in it. We should bear in mind that the List <strong>of</strong> Hirschcan be rephrased as what ‘‘all Americans also need to know but areprevented from knowing’’ (Macedo 1999, 118).
<strong>Culture</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Pedagogy</strong> in Teacher <strong>Education</strong> 171Downloaded By: [Optimised: Universiteit Gent] At: 08:30 27 April 2011What we argue is that Hirsch (<strong>and</strong> others from a conservativeperspective) made a point: we need a ‘shared discourse’ <strong>and</strong> probablysome ‘shared knowledge.’ Such a shared discourse createsdiscourse communities on the level <strong>of</strong> a discipline <strong>and</strong> on the level<strong>of</strong> a community. We should realize that our ways <strong>of</strong> life ‘‘dependupon shared meanings <strong>and</strong> shared concepts <strong>and</strong> depends as wellupon shared modes <strong>of</strong> discourse for negotiating differences ismeaning <strong>and</strong> interpretation’’ (Bruner 1990, 25).Bizzell realizes we need a positive utopian moment in our critique,we need to take the next step in ‘‘our rhetorical turn’’ (Bizzell1998, 384). Therefore she suggests: ‘‘we will have to be more forthrightabout the ideologies we support as well as those we attack,<strong>and</strong> we will have to articulate a positive program legitimated byan authority that is nevertheless nonfoundational. We must helpour students, <strong>and</strong> our fellow citizens, to engage in a rhetorical processthat can collectively generate trustworthy knowledge <strong>and</strong>beliefs...’’ (Bizzell 1998, 384). She describes the public function<strong>of</strong> the intellectual as precisely rhetorical: ‘‘our task is to aid everyonein our academic community, <strong>and</strong> in our national community,to share a discourse’’ (Bizzel 1998, 375).PARADIGMSTeachers <strong>of</strong> literature for example are confronted with differentparadigms: cultural heritage, personal response <strong>and</strong> cultural criticism(O’Neil 1993, based on Duncan 2002). If teachers are wrestlingwith these different paradigms, it could be the result <strong>of</strong> thefact they believe that one <strong>of</strong> these is absolutely right. We think allthree perspectives have made an interesting contribution so are,in a way, true. Realizing this could be therapeutic.<strong>Cultural</strong> studies plays an important role in this therapymaking us aware <strong>of</strong> the different ways we can talk about a particulartopic. Since we have a variety <strong>of</strong> purposes, we develop avariety <strong>of</strong> languages, vocabularies, discourses, language games,literacies, cultures, etc. Hopefully we thereby also avoidspeaking with a sense <strong>of</strong> fundamentalist certainty how the worldis or should be.Teaching is not solely based on the transmission <strong>of</strong> tradition, itshould also be inspired by innovations <strong>and</strong> corrections. Weagree with Williams when he states that culture consists <strong>of</strong> ‘‘theknown meanings <strong>and</strong> directions, which it members are trainedto; the new observances <strong>and</strong> meanings, which are <strong>of</strong>fered <strong>and</strong>tested’’ (Williams 1958=1993, 7). And we think that working withthe best <strong>of</strong> cultural studies is even benificial for cultural heritage:‘‘the real enemy <strong>of</strong> traditions is the kind <strong>of</strong> orthodox literary
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