Bad Education

In this article I study the U.S. 2005 documentary film, The Devil’s Miner, co-produced  by Kief Davidson and Richard Ladkani. Like many other internationally produced documentary films of this sort, it combines an ethnographic view of its subject with a mission of critique, in this case, the denunc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Debra A. Castillo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Latin American Research Commons 2017-04-01
Series:Latin American Literary Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://account.lalrp.net/index.php/lasa-j-lalr/article/view/11
_version_ 1797655806753112064
author Debra A. Castillo
author_facet Debra A. Castillo
author_sort Debra A. Castillo
collection DOAJ
description In this article I study the U.S. 2005 documentary film, The Devil’s Miner, co-produced  by Kief Davidson and Richard Ladkani. Like many other internationally produced documentary films of this sort, it combines an ethnographic view of its subject with a mission of critique, in this case, the denunciation of child labor in the extremely dangerous and physically exhausting environment of the Cerro Rico mine in Potosí. The general message to the viewer is an emotionally-laden appeal to support children, an inarguable good. The resolution falls back on cultural approaches directed toward the future, specifically, toward keeping children in school, and increasing formal educational possibilities. There is a way in which this universal panacea misses an important point bluntly and correctly outlined by Saskia Sassen, when she argues that economies relying on a significant pool drawn from the laboring precariat tend to be based on a shared understanding that the nation is afflicted with a surplus population (too many migrants, too many children, etc), and for that very reason there is tacit permission to render a significant category of workers temporary and disposable.  Indeed, the economy requires this body of workers, and in this context education—while an evident good for the small numbers of children who achieve it--does not address the fundamental underlying conjunction of needs: for workers on the one hand, for survival on the other. To propose education as the solution, then, seems an unintended distraction from a difficult challenge posed by globalized economic systems.  In Bolivia, the children’s union UNATSBO has taken a different approach, arguing for the rights of children as workers.  
first_indexed 2024-03-11T17:19:52Z
format Article
id doaj.art-cb9a8eeb6f174e50a23128607bb67f45
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2330-135X
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-11T17:19:52Z
publishDate 2017-04-01
publisher Latin American Research Commons
record_format Article
series Latin American Literary Review
spelling doaj.art-cb9a8eeb6f174e50a23128607bb67f452023-10-19T14:48:49ZengLatin American Research CommonsLatin American Literary Review2330-135X2017-04-01448710.26824/lalr.11Bad EducationDebra A. Castillo In this article I study the U.S. 2005 documentary film, The Devil’s Miner, co-produced  by Kief Davidson and Richard Ladkani. Like many other internationally produced documentary films of this sort, it combines an ethnographic view of its subject with a mission of critique, in this case, the denunciation of child labor in the extremely dangerous and physically exhausting environment of the Cerro Rico mine in Potosí. The general message to the viewer is an emotionally-laden appeal to support children, an inarguable good. The resolution falls back on cultural approaches directed toward the future, specifically, toward keeping children in school, and increasing formal educational possibilities. There is a way in which this universal panacea misses an important point bluntly and correctly outlined by Saskia Sassen, when she argues that economies relying on a significant pool drawn from the laboring precariat tend to be based on a shared understanding that the nation is afflicted with a surplus population (too many migrants, too many children, etc), and for that very reason there is tacit permission to render a significant category of workers temporary and disposable.  Indeed, the economy requires this body of workers, and in this context education—while an evident good for the small numbers of children who achieve it--does not address the fundamental underlying conjunction of needs: for workers on the one hand, for survival on the other. To propose education as the solution, then, seems an unintended distraction from a difficult challenge posed by globalized economic systems.  In Bolivia, the children’s union UNATSBO has taken a different approach, arguing for the rights of children as workers.   https://account.lalrp.net/index.php/lasa-j-lalr/article/view/11documentaryUNATSBOPotosíDevil’s MinerprecariatKief Davidson
spellingShingle Debra A. Castillo
Bad Education
Latin American Literary Review
documentary
UNATSBO
Potosí
Devil’s Miner
precariat
Kief Davidson
title Bad Education
title_full Bad Education
title_fullStr Bad Education
title_full_unstemmed Bad Education
title_short Bad Education
title_sort bad education
topic documentary
UNATSBO
Potosí
Devil’s Miner
precariat
Kief Davidson
url https://account.lalrp.net/index.php/lasa-j-lalr/article/view/11
work_keys_str_mv AT debraacastillo badeducation