Foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: Post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in education

Background: The need for transforming South African education can ultimately be traced to a form of Western subjectivity which dominated Europe since the classical age (1600–1750). The notions of ‘discipline’ and ‘subjectivity’ suggest distinct associations with repressive regimes like apartheid, an...

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Main Author: Martina L. Mabille
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2019-11-01
Series:Transformation in Higher Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/72
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spelling doaj-4b953e27303a49ccaa4e2bbdad8905902020-11-25T02:20:16ZengAOSISTransformation in Higher Education2415-09912519-56382019-11-0140e1e710.4102/the.v4i0.7236Foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: Post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in educationMartina L. Mabille0Department of Ethics and Apologetics, Faculty of Theology, North-West University, PotchefstroomBackground: The need for transforming South African education can ultimately be traced to a form of Western subjectivity which dominated Europe since the classical age (1600–1750). The notions of ‘discipline’ and ‘subjectivity’ suggest distinct associations with repressive regimes like apartheid, and the present article will argue that the assumptions behind apartheid education cannot be understood without understanding the still more foundational assumptions – taken as axiom – underlying Western subjectivity. This conception of subjectivity underlies the ‘disciplined society’ and its concomitant ethos of expansion, ranging from its colonial projects to the rise of the human sciences. As a result, it is of considerable value for the South African educational environment to consider Michel Foucault’s unmasking of the interplay between subjectivity, truth and power, and to explore the possibilities offered by Foucault’s own ethic of transgression. Aim: Drawing on Michel Foucault’s genealogy of the modern subject and archaeologies of modern knowledge, it will be demonstrated that the process of transformation of higher education in South Africa not only provides the opportunity to tend to a grave historical injustice, but also to develop a critique of modernist educational practices of the West and thus to cultivate its own educational ethos as a more just and authentic South African alternative. Setting: South African Higher Education in the 21st century. Methods: Foucauldian–Nietzschean genealogy, in the spirit of Foucault’s own use of Nietzsche: ‘The only valid tribute to thought such as Nietzsche’s is precisely to use it, to deform it, to make it groan and protest’. Result: A re-considered and reconfigured notion of educational identity beyond the confines of modernist Western subjectivity. Conclusion: While full justice can never be done to the full horrors of the past, the process of transformation in education may provide an opportunity to not only address injustices in the past, but also to create a new African educational ethic which may contribute something truly new to the world’s educational heritage.https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/72educationenlightenmentfoucaulttransformationprogresspower
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martina L. Mabille
spellingShingle Martina L. Mabille
Foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: Post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in education
Transformation in Higher Education
education
enlightenment
foucault
transformation
progress
power
author_facet Martina L. Mabille
author_sort Martina L. Mabille
title Foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: Post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in education
title_short Foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: Post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in education
title_full Foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: Post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in education
title_fullStr Foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: Post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in education
title_full_unstemmed Foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: Post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in education
title_sort foucault and the origins of the disciplined subject: post-subjectivity as a condition for transformation in education
publisher AOSIS
series Transformation in Higher Education
issn 2415-0991
2519-5638
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Background: The need for transforming South African education can ultimately be traced to a form of Western subjectivity which dominated Europe since the classical age (1600–1750). The notions of ‘discipline’ and ‘subjectivity’ suggest distinct associations with repressive regimes like apartheid, and the present article will argue that the assumptions behind apartheid education cannot be understood without understanding the still more foundational assumptions – taken as axiom – underlying Western subjectivity. This conception of subjectivity underlies the ‘disciplined society’ and its concomitant ethos of expansion, ranging from its colonial projects to the rise of the human sciences. As a result, it is of considerable value for the South African educational environment to consider Michel Foucault’s unmasking of the interplay between subjectivity, truth and power, and to explore the possibilities offered by Foucault’s own ethic of transgression. Aim: Drawing on Michel Foucault’s genealogy of the modern subject and archaeologies of modern knowledge, it will be demonstrated that the process of transformation of higher education in South Africa not only provides the opportunity to tend to a grave historical injustice, but also to develop a critique of modernist educational practices of the West and thus to cultivate its own educational ethos as a more just and authentic South African alternative. Setting: South African Higher Education in the 21st century. Methods: Foucauldian–Nietzschean genealogy, in the spirit of Foucault’s own use of Nietzsche: ‘The only valid tribute to thought such as Nietzsche’s is precisely to use it, to deform it, to make it groan and protest’. Result: A re-considered and reconfigured notion of educational identity beyond the confines of modernist Western subjectivity. Conclusion: While full justice can never be done to the full horrors of the past, the process of transformation in education may provide an opportunity to not only address injustices in the past, but also to create a new African educational ethic which may contribute something truly new to the world’s educational heritage.
topic education
enlightenment
foucault
transformation
progress
power
url https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/72
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