Drawing upon Judith Butler’s conceptualisation of performativity and subjectification, this article explores the effects of different kinds of counter political action to disrupt exclusionary school practices that further marginalise children who are, often already, on the edges of school life. Firstly, tracing the impossibilities sometimes encountered when taking up a politics of reinscription, the article goes on to argue that the role of the pedagogue engaged in counter politics needs further disruption in order that children themselves have more space to determine who and how to be. Here, I explore how the rigid teacher/ student hierarchical binary can be unsettled through play. A more intersubjective relationship emerges between teache...
This thesis recounts the development through fieldwork in primary schools of a distinctive performa...
This article reports on an instance of direct political action undertaken in the form of a boycott o...
In this thesis I undertake a critical policy analysis in which I place education reform in the UK wi...
This article explores power, resistance and agency in relation to pedagogic politics aiming to disru...
Whilst there has been increasing focus on the impact of neoliberal education policy on the curriculu...
This paper investigates the ways that teachers in one alternative school blur the boundaries of the ...
This paper takes up Judith Butler's calls to suspend the desire to completely know theother, and dis...
Three decades of neo-liberal education in western countries, particularly English-speaking countries...
This paper considers the contribution to understanding educational inequalities offered by post-stru...
This paper uses evidence form a small-scale study of two English primary classrooms to examine schoo...
Terry Wrigley - ORCID 0000-0002-1536-243X https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1536-243XThis article argues ...
The Early Years in England has seen heavy investment since New Labour came into power in 1997. This ...
peer-reviewedThis paper critiques the impact of neo-liberalism on postprimary education, and in par...
This paper focuses on the professional development of primary school teachers using drama to develop...
While accounts of the so-called ‘Totally Pedagogised Society’ (Bonal and Rambla) or ‘Public Pedagogy...
This thesis recounts the development through fieldwork in primary schools of a distinctive performa...
This article reports on an instance of direct political action undertaken in the form of a boycott o...
In this thesis I undertake a critical policy analysis in which I place education reform in the UK wi...
This article explores power, resistance and agency in relation to pedagogic politics aiming to disru...
Whilst there has been increasing focus on the impact of neoliberal education policy on the curriculu...
This paper investigates the ways that teachers in one alternative school blur the boundaries of the ...
This paper takes up Judith Butler's calls to suspend the desire to completely know theother, and dis...
Three decades of neo-liberal education in western countries, particularly English-speaking countries...
This paper considers the contribution to understanding educational inequalities offered by post-stru...
This paper uses evidence form a small-scale study of two English primary classrooms to examine schoo...
Terry Wrigley - ORCID 0000-0002-1536-243X https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1536-243XThis article argues ...
The Early Years in England has seen heavy investment since New Labour came into power in 1997. This ...
peer-reviewedThis paper critiques the impact of neo-liberalism on postprimary education, and in par...
This paper focuses on the professional development of primary school teachers using drama to develop...
While accounts of the so-called ‘Totally Pedagogised Society’ (Bonal and Rambla) or ‘Public Pedagogy...
This thesis recounts the development through fieldwork in primary schools of a distinctive performa...
This article reports on an instance of direct political action undertaken in the form of a boycott o...
In this thesis I undertake a critical policy analysis in which I place education reform in the UK wi...