Unreasonable Rage, Disobedient Dissent The Social Construction Of Student Activists And The Limits Of Student Engagement

Learning and Teaching(2018)

Cited 2|Views1
No score
Abstract
This article explores the limits of student engagement in higher education in the United Kingdom through the social construction of student activists within media discourses. It scrutinises the impact of dominant neoliberal discourses on the notion of student engagement, constructing certain students as legitimately engaged whilst infantilising and criminalising those who participate in protest. Exploring media coverage of and commentary on students engaged in activism, from the 2010 protests against university fee increases and from more recent activism in 2016, the article draws upon Sara Ahmed's (2014) Willful Subjects and Imogen Tyler's (2013) Revolting Subjects to examine critically the ways in which some powerful discourses control and limit which activities, practices and voices can be recognised as legitimate forms of student engagement.
More
Translated text
Key words
activism, discourse, higher education, media, neoliberalism, protest, social construction, student engagement
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined