Beyond binaries and before becoming: Reconsidering resistance in UK higher education

Drawing from the tensions within non-representational and human practice perspectives on affect, this paper continues the task of re-conceptualising academic-level resistance in the context of UK higher education. Such re-conceptualisation is underpinned by the belief that illustrating the breadth o...

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Main Author: Mollie Baker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Liverpool John Moores University 2023-03-01
Series:PRISM
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openjournals.ljmu.ac.uk/index.php/prism/article/view/364
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author Mollie Baker
author_facet Mollie Baker
author_sort Mollie Baker
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description Drawing from the tensions within non-representational and human practice perspectives on affect, this paper continues the task of re-conceptualising academic-level resistance in the context of UK higher education. Such re-conceptualisation is underpinned by the belief that illustrating the breadth of resistant possibility within and between universities can assist in the development of action against the competitive and for-profit imperatives currently overwhelming this educational sphere. Indeed, while resistance research is increasingly interested in the (dis)connections between overt and “everyday” (Scott, 1985) forms of action (e.g. Contu, 2008; Zembylas, 2019), HE researchers have paid little attention to the latter. Consequently, academic-level resistance remains normatively portrayed as exceptional, novel and less influential than that it rejects. For the sake of contributing a counternarrative, this paper employs a diffractive methodology to examine the affective roles of emotion, meaning making practices and pre-personal factors. By speculating how academic-level resistance derives from not only consciously undertaken cost-benefit analyses but from the entanglement of material and non-material elements, this discussion emphasises the notion of “becoming” and so problematises reductive binaries of overt/covert, high-cost/low-cost, resister/complier. Irrespective of the resounding difficulties that accompany efforts to exploit the affective dimensions of resistance, this emphasis nevertheless situates possibility at the heart of UK higher education and the actions pushing against its neoliberal form.
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spelling doaj.art-7dfef3f3d2f5475b91bdc6c92f15345c2023-03-10T10:56:42ZengLiverpool John Moores UniversityPRISM2514-53472023-03-01514862https://doi.org/10.24377/prism.ljmu.0302201Beyond binaries and before becoming: Reconsidering resistance in UK higher educationMollie Baker0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0589-9222University of Cambridge, Newnham CollegeDrawing from the tensions within non-representational and human practice perspectives on affect, this paper continues the task of re-conceptualising academic-level resistance in the context of UK higher education. Such re-conceptualisation is underpinned by the belief that illustrating the breadth of resistant possibility within and between universities can assist in the development of action against the competitive and for-profit imperatives currently overwhelming this educational sphere. Indeed, while resistance research is increasingly interested in the (dis)connections between overt and “everyday” (Scott, 1985) forms of action (e.g. Contu, 2008; Zembylas, 2019), HE researchers have paid little attention to the latter. Consequently, academic-level resistance remains normatively portrayed as exceptional, novel and less influential than that it rejects. For the sake of contributing a counternarrative, this paper employs a diffractive methodology to examine the affective roles of emotion, meaning making practices and pre-personal factors. By speculating how academic-level resistance derives from not only consciously undertaken cost-benefit analyses but from the entanglement of material and non-material elements, this discussion emphasises the notion of “becoming” and so problematises reductive binaries of overt/covert, high-cost/low-cost, resister/complier. Irrespective of the resounding difficulties that accompany efforts to exploit the affective dimensions of resistance, this emphasis nevertheless situates possibility at the heart of UK higher education and the actions pushing against its neoliberal form.https://openjournals.ljmu.ac.uk/index.php/prism/article/view/364affectresistancehigher educationpoststructuralbinaries
spellingShingle Mollie Baker
Beyond binaries and before becoming: Reconsidering resistance in UK higher education
PRISM
affect
resistance
higher education
poststructural
binaries
title Beyond binaries and before becoming: Reconsidering resistance in UK higher education
title_full Beyond binaries and before becoming: Reconsidering resistance in UK higher education
title_fullStr Beyond binaries and before becoming: Reconsidering resistance in UK higher education
title_full_unstemmed Beyond binaries and before becoming: Reconsidering resistance in UK higher education
title_short Beyond binaries and before becoming: Reconsidering resistance in UK higher education
title_sort beyond binaries and before becoming reconsidering resistance in uk higher education
topic affect
resistance
higher education
poststructural
binaries
url https://openjournals.ljmu.ac.uk/index.php/prism/article/view/364
work_keys_str_mv AT molliebaker beyondbinariesandbeforebecomingreconsideringresistanceinukhighereducation