Who Needs the Undercommons? Refuge and Resistance in Public High Schools

This paper is a theoretical discussion of The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study (Harney & Moten, 2013) as a contribution to critical education in public schools. The undercommons serves here as an epistemic device, or a way of seeing and knowing, in relation to public education. Th...

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Main Author: G. H. Greer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2018-12-01
Series:Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
Online Access:https://journals.library.brocku.ca/brocked/index.php/home/article/view/778
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spelling doaj-a144375230ea4566adf68841204b892b2020-11-25T03:16:42ZengBrock UniversityBrock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice1183-11892371-77502018-12-0128151810.26522/brocked.v28i1.778778Who Needs the Undercommons? Refuge and Resistance in Public High SchoolsG. H. Greer0Concordia UniversityThis paper is a theoretical discussion of The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study (Harney & Moten, 2013) as a contribution to critical education in public schools. The undercommons serves here as an epistemic device, or a way of seeing and knowing, in relation to public education. The function of this device is to establish an appreciative view of student survival and activist behaviours and to centre educational policy as a potential mechanism of student exclusion. I propose that the practice of inclusion in schools coexists with unacknowledged operations of exclusion. The undercommons is employed as a lens to make such mechanisms of disenfranchisement apparent. I advocate here for an extension of inclusive education which, in addition to targeted supports for particular demographic groups, must concern itself with more general practices of disenfranchisement.https://journals.library.brocku.ca/brocked/index.php/home/article/view/778
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author G. H. Greer
spellingShingle G. H. Greer
Who Needs the Undercommons? Refuge and Resistance in Public High Schools
Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
author_facet G. H. Greer
author_sort G. H. Greer
title Who Needs the Undercommons? Refuge and Resistance in Public High Schools
title_short Who Needs the Undercommons? Refuge and Resistance in Public High Schools
title_full Who Needs the Undercommons? Refuge and Resistance in Public High Schools
title_fullStr Who Needs the Undercommons? Refuge and Resistance in Public High Schools
title_full_unstemmed Who Needs the Undercommons? Refuge and Resistance in Public High Schools
title_sort who needs the undercommons? refuge and resistance in public high schools
publisher Brock University
series Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
issn 1183-1189
2371-7750
publishDate 2018-12-01
description This paper is a theoretical discussion of The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study (Harney & Moten, 2013) as a contribution to critical education in public schools. The undercommons serves here as an epistemic device, or a way of seeing and knowing, in relation to public education. The function of this device is to establish an appreciative view of student survival and activist behaviours and to centre educational policy as a potential mechanism of student exclusion. I propose that the practice of inclusion in schools coexists with unacknowledged operations of exclusion. The undercommons is employed as a lens to make such mechanisms of disenfranchisement apparent. I advocate here for an extension of inclusive education which, in addition to targeted supports for particular demographic groups, must concern itself with more general practices of disenfranchisement.
url https://journals.library.brocku.ca/brocked/index.php/home/article/view/778
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