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Main Author: Webb, Darren
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1390494
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author Webb, Darren
author_facet Webb, Darren
Webb, Darren
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Ah Bartleby! Study, Learning, and Pedagogy in Occupy Wall Street Webb, Darren Activism Social Action Politics Futures (of Society) World Views Social Systems Rhetoric Learning Processes On October 26, 2011, a post appeared on the Occupy Wall Street Library blog titled "I would prefer not to." The constant refrain of Herman Melville's "Bartleby, the Scrivener" became one of Occupy's defining mottos, appearing on placards, T-shirts, and tote bags. The phrase became so symbolic that it was used on the posters promoting the general strike called for May 2012. Bartleby's mode of passive resistance has been theorized extensively. His appropriation by OWS has been the source of much theorizing too. What I want to do in this paper is use Bartleby as a useful analogy for exploring the educational logic of Occupy Wall Street. While some read a dangerous and threatening "Bartlebyan inscrutability" into OWS's various refusals (the refusal to issue demands, to address questions of political ontology, to specify conditions of success), I argue instead that the performativity of Bartleby's refusal helps cast light on the need for pedagogical intervention in moments and movements of utopian rupture. The very indeterminacy of study as a mode of educational being within OWS--of "preferring not to" actualize potential, adopt a political subjectivity, elucidate any determinate ends--created a vacuum that precluded the movement from learning from itself. The oscillating state of permanent suspension, in which the utopian possibilities contained within the movement were held im-potential, led to paralysis and neglect. In contrast to the "weak" utopianism ascribed to OWS by Tyson Lewis, I conclude the paper by calling for a "strong" utopianism conceived as a collective endeavor and iterative process but one within which pedagogical organization plays a crucial facilitating role.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1390494
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2023
record_format eric
spellingShingle Ah Bartleby! Study, Learning, and Pedagogy in Occupy Wall Street
Webb, Darren
Activism
Social Action
Politics
Futures (of Society)
World Views
Social Systems
Rhetoric
Learning Processes
Ah Bartleby! Study, Learning, and Pedagogy in Occupy Wall Street Webb, Darren Activism Social Action Politics Futures (of Society) World Views Social Systems Rhetoric Learning Processes On October 26, 2011, a post appeared on the Occupy Wall Street Library blog titled "I would prefer not to." The constant refrain of Herman Melville's "Bartleby, the Scrivener" became one of Occupy's defining mottos, appearing on placards, T-shirts, and tote bags. The phrase became so symbolic that it was used on the posters promoting the general strike called for May 2012. Bartleby's mode of passive resistance has been theorized extensively. His appropriation by OWS has been the source of much theorizing too. What I want to do in this paper is use Bartleby as a useful analogy for exploring the educational logic of Occupy Wall Street. While some read a dangerous and threatening "Bartlebyan inscrutability" into OWS's various refusals (the refusal to issue demands, to address questions of political ontology, to specify conditions of success), I argue instead that the performativity of Bartleby's refusal helps cast light on the need for pedagogical intervention in moments and movements of utopian rupture. The very indeterminacy of study as a mode of educational being within OWS--of "preferring not to" actualize potential, adopt a political subjectivity, elucidate any determinate ends--created a vacuum that precluded the movement from learning from itself. The oscillating state of permanent suspension, in which the utopian possibilities contained within the movement were held im-potential, led to paralysis and neglect. In contrast to the "weak" utopianism ascribed to OWS by Tyson Lewis, I conclude the paper by calling for a "strong" utopianism conceived as a collective endeavor and iterative process but one within which pedagogical organization plays a crucial facilitating role.
title Ah Bartleby! Study, Learning, and Pedagogy in Occupy Wall Street
topic Activism
Social Action
Politics
Futures (of Society)
World Views
Social Systems
Rhetoric
Learning Processes
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1390494