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Failure to Hold
Julie A. Webber
€ 71.99
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Description for Failure to Hold
Paperback. Underscores the impossible mission that the U.S. public attempts to impose on students in schools: to contain the anger and rage that they feel toward society. Num Pages: 232 pages, bibliography, index. BIC Classification: 1KBB; JFFE; JNA; JNSL. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 229 x 146 x 13. Weight in Grams: 308.
In Failure to Hold, Julie Webber examines the public's reaction to school violence in the United States in the late 1990s and articulates how theories of school violence omit important truths about young peoples' contributions to healthy societies and political systems. Analyzing three of the media's favorite cases of school violence—West Paducah, Jonesboro, and Springfield—and three popular explanations for such violence—easy access to guns, popular culture, and psychiatric illness—she illuminates the ideas these explanations disregard and the uses of culture they deny, including the practice of democracy in public spaces such as schools. Failure to Hold underscores the impossible stricture that the American public attempts to impose on students: to contain the anger and rage that they feel toward society. To explain this phenomenon, Webber revives the Marxist notion of the 'hidden curriculum.' Popular culture intensifies the powers of the hidden curriculum by collapsing the distinction between school and society. The title of this book signals the end of U.S. democracy's vital hold on youth rebellions that used to contribute positively to open, free societies. However, in a culture where each person's next move can be anticipated and channeled into consumer demand and moral censorship, youth rebellion is the next plotline in a Hollywood film, subject of the family drama, or market for designer pharmaceuticals. The hidden curriculum organizes our normative environment and students write the hidden curriculum for us, in bullets and bombs.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2002
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield United States
Number of pages
232
Condition
New
Number of Pages
232
Place of Publication
Lanham, MD, United States
ISBN
9780742519848
SKU
V9780742519848
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Julie A. Webber
Julie A. Webber is assistant professor of politics and government at Illinois State University.
Reviews for Failure to Hold
Fine theoretical exploration of how self-panicked American adulthood would brutally custodialize all adolescents rather than confront the deserved horror of its own introspection.
Mike A. Males Mike A. Males, author of The Scapegoat Generation and Framing Youth A sophisticated interpretation of recent violent attacks by students in American schools. Webber presents these troubling episodes of students shooting other students, teachers, and administrators as examples of 'domestic blowback' in the post-Cold War era. Committed by adolescents, struggling to find intellectual freedom as learners and personal autonomy as adults, these incidents are tied in her analysis to the 'hidden curriculum' of control in contemporary schooling. Ironically, she finds that the strategies of surveillance and containment, which so many educational authorities have mobilized to prevent future violent outbreaks, only hobble the development of the critical skills needed by students to survive in today's global economy and multicultural society.
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University A powerful and provocative analysis of the politics, culture, and gender of spectacular school violence. Webber's sophisticated study merits reading by both prospective and practicing teachers, as well as school administrators and school board members.
William F. Pinar, St. Bernard Parish Alumni Endowed Professor, Louisiana State University
Mike A. Males Mike A. Males, author of The Scapegoat Generation and Framing Youth A sophisticated interpretation of recent violent attacks by students in American schools. Webber presents these troubling episodes of students shooting other students, teachers, and administrators as examples of 'domestic blowback' in the post-Cold War era. Committed by adolescents, struggling to find intellectual freedom as learners and personal autonomy as adults, these incidents are tied in her analysis to the 'hidden curriculum' of control in contemporary schooling. Ironically, she finds that the strategies of surveillance and containment, which so many educational authorities have mobilized to prevent future violent outbreaks, only hobble the development of the critical skills needed by students to survive in today's global economy and multicultural society.
Timothy W. Luke, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University A powerful and provocative analysis of the politics, culture, and gender of spectacular school violence. Webber's sophisticated study merits reading by both prospective and practicing teachers, as well as school administrators and school board members.
William F. Pinar, St. Bernard Parish Alumni Endowed Professor, Louisiana State University