Reflections on student power: An absurdist viewpoint
Author(s) -
Brad Bierdz
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
power and education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.314
H-Index - 13
ISSN - 1757-7438
DOI - 10.1177/1757743820984179
Subject(s) - power (physics) , absurdism , extant taxon , sociology , identity (music) , humanity , space (punctuation) , higher education , epistemology , power structure , pedagogy , social psychology , public relations , psychology , aesthetics , political science , law , philosophy , physics , quantum mechanics , evolutionary biology , anthropology , ethnography , biology , linguistics
This exploration takes a look at how students in higher education are disempowered through regimes of social power that are always already extant and ubiquitous within educational regimes. Moreover, this exploration pays particular interest and attention to students in higher education because in many cases throughout relevant research, these student populations are conceived as being the most empowered students within a broad educational landscape, which this piece foundationally challenges. Fundamentally, this article uses a Camusian or Absurdist notion of power and social identity to make sense of how students in higher education take up space within seemingly disempowered educational spaces only to insistently and futilely call to themselves and other students as empowered, although such insistences are empty fallacies of specific social humanities hailing towards their only perceived means of ‘valuable’ social interaction defined by modern conceptions of humanity always already within power relations.
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