| The dark times that haunt the current age are epitomized by the  monsters that have come to rule the United States and who now dominate  the major political parties and other commanding political and economic  institutions. Their nightmarish reign of misery, violence, and  disposability is also evident in their dominance of a formative culture  and its attendant cultural apparatuses that produce a vast machinery of  manufactured consent. This is a social formation that extends from the  mainstream broadcast media and Internet to a print culture, all of which  embrace the spectacle of violence, legitimate opinions over facts, and  revel in a celebrity and consumer culture of ignorance and theatrics.  Under the reign of this normalized ideological architecture of alleged  commonsense, literacy is now regarded with disdain, words are reduced to  data, and science is confused with pseudo-science.   Thinking is now regarded as an act of stupidity, and ignorance a  virtue. All traces of critical thought appear only at the margins of the  culture as ignorance becomes the primary organizing principle of  American society. For instance, two thirds of the American public  believe that creationism should be taught in schools and most of the  Republic Party in Congress do not believe that climate change is caused  by human activity, making the U.S. the laughing stock of the world.  Politicians endlessly lie knowing that the public is addicted to shocks,  which allows them to drown in overstimulation and live in an  ever-accelerating overflow of information and images. News has become  entertainment and echoes reality rather than interrogating it.  Unsurprisingly, education in the larger culture has become a  disimagination machine, a tool for legitimating ignorance, and it is  central to the formation of an authoritarian politics that has gutted  any vestige of democracy from the ideology, policies, and institutions  that now control American society.   I am not talking simply about the kind of anti-intellectualism that  theorists such a Richard Hofstadter, Ed Herman and Noam Chomsky, and  more recently Susan Jacoby have documented, however insightful their  analyses might be. I am pointing to a more lethal form of illiteracy  that is often ignored. Illiteracy is now a scourge and a political tool  designed primarily to make war on language, meaning, thinking, and the  capacity for critical thought. Chris Hedges is right in stating that  “the emptiness of language is a gift to demagogues and the corporations  that saturate the landscape with manipulated images and the idiom of  mass culture.”[1]  The new form of illiteracy does not simply constitute an absence of  learning, ideas, or knowledge. Nor can it be solely attributed to what  has been called the “smartphone society.”[2]  On the contrary, it is a willful practice and goal used to actively  depoliticize people and make them complicit with the forces that impose  misery and suffering upon their lives.   Gore Vidal once called America the United States of Amnesia. The  title should be extended to the United States of Amnesia and Willful  Illiteracy. Illiteracy no longer simply marks populations immersed in  poverty with little access to quality education; nor does it only  suggest the lack of proficient skills enabling people to read and write  with a degree of understanding and fluency. More profoundly, illiteracy  is also about what it means not to be able to act from a position of  thoughtfulness, informed judgment, and critical agency. Illiteracy has  become a form of political repression that discourages a culture of  questioning, renders agency as an act of intervention inoperable, and  restages power as a mode of domination. It is precisely this mode of  illiteracy that now constitutes the modus operandi of a society that  both privatizes and kills the imagination by poisoning it with  falsehoods, consumer fantasies, data loops, and the need for instant  gratification. This is a mode of manufactured illiteracy and education  that has no language for relating the self to public life, social  responsibility or the demands of citizenship. It is important to  recognize that the rise of this new mode of illiteracy is not simply  about the failure of public and higher education to create critical and  active citizens; it is about a society that eliminates those public  spheres that make thinking possible while imposing a culture of fear in  which there is the looming threat that anyone who holds power  accountable will be punished. At stake here is not only the crisis of a  democratic society, but a crisis of memory, ethics, and agency.   Evidence of such a repressive policy is visible in the growth of the  surveillance state, the suppression of dissent, especially among Black  youth, the elimination of tenure in states such as Wisconsin, the rise  of the punishing state, and the militarization of the police. It is also  evident in the demonization, punishing, and war waged by the Obama  administration on whistleblowers such as Edward Snowden, Chelsea  Manning, and Jeffrey Sterling, among others. Any viable attempt at  developing a radical politics must begin to address the role of  education and civic literacy and what I have termed public pedagogy as  central not only to politics itself but also to the creation of subjects  capable of becoming individual and social agents willing to struggle  against injustices and fight to reclaim and develop those institutions  crucial to the functioning and promises of a substantive democracy. One  place to begin to think through such a project is by addressing the  meaning and role of pedagogy as part of the broader struggle for and  practice of freedom.   The reach of pedagogy extends from schools to diverse cultural  apparatuses such as the mainstream media, alternative screen cultures,  and the expanding digital screen culture. Far more than a teaching  method, pedagogy is a moral and political practice actively involved not  only in the production of knowledge, skills, and values but also in the  construction of identities, modes of identification, and forms of  individual and social agency. Accordingly, pedagogy is at the heart of  any understanding of politics and the ideological scaffolding of those  framing mechanisms that mediate our everyday lives.   Across the globe,  the forces of free-market fundamentalism are using the educational force  of the wider culture and the takeover of public and higher education  both to reproduce the culture of business and to wage an assault on the  historically guaranteed social provisions and civil rights provided by  the welfare state, public schools, unions, women’s reproductive rights,  and civil liberties, among others, all the while undercutting public  faith in the defining institutions of democracy.   As market mentalities and moralities tighten their grip on all  aspects of society, democratic institutions and public spheres are being  downsized, if not altogether disappearing. As these institutions  vanish—from public schools and alternative media to health care centers–  there is also a serious erosion of the discourses of community,  justice, equality, public values, and the common good. This grim reality  has been called by Alex Honneth a “failed sociality”– a failure in the  power of the civic imagination, political will, and open democracy. It  is also part of a politics that strips the social of any democratic  ideals and undermines any understanding of education as a public good  and pedagogy as an empowering practice, a practice which acts  directly upon the conditions which bear down on our lives in order to  change them when necessary.   One of the challenges facing the current generation of educators,  students, progressives, and other cultural workers is the need to  address the role they might play in educating students to be critically  engaged agents, attentive to addressing important social issues and  being alert to the responsibility of deepening and expanding the meaning  and practices of a vibrant democracy. At the heart of such a challenge  is the question of what education should accomplish not simply in a  democracy but at a historical moment when the United States is about to  slip into the dark night of authoritarianism. What work do educators  have to do to create the economic, political, and ethical conditions  necessary to endow young people and the general public with the  capacities to think, question, doubt, imagine the unimaginable, and  defend education as essential for inspiring and energizing the citizens  necessary for the existence of a robust democracy? In a world in which  there is an increasing abandonment of egalitarian and democratic  impulses, what will it take to educate young people and the broader  polity to challenge authority and hold power accountable?   What role might education and critical pedagogy have in a society in  which the social has been individualized, emotional life collapses into  the therapeutic, and education is reduced to either a private affair or a  kind of algorithmic mode of regulation in which everything is reduced  to a desired outcome. What role can education play to challenge the  deadly neoliberal claim that all problems are individual, regardless of  whether the roots of such problems li[k]e in larger systemic forces. In a  culture drowning in a new love affair with instrumental rationality, it  is not surprising that values that are not measurable– compassion,  vision, the imagination, trust, solidarity, care for the other, and a  passion for justice—withers.   Given the crisis of education, agency, and memory that haunts the  current historical conjuncture, the left and other progressives need a  new language for addressing the changing contexts and issues facing a  world in which there is an unprecedented convergence of  resources–financial, cultural, political, economic, scientific,  military, and technological– increasingly used to exercise powerful and  diverse forms of control and domination. Such a language needs to be  political without being dogmatic and needs to recognize that pedagogy is  always political because it is connected to the acquisition of agency.  In this instance, making the pedagogical political means being vigilant  about “that very moment in which identities are being produced and  groups are being constituted, or objects are being created.”[3]  At the same time it means progressives need to be attentive to those  practice in which critical modes of agency and particular identities are  being denied. It also means developing a comprehensive understanding of  politics, one that should begin with the call to reroute single issue  politics into a mass social movement under the banner of a defense of  the public good, the commons, and a global democracy.   In part, this suggests developing pedagogical practices that not only  inspire and energize people but are also capable of challenging the  growing number of anti-democratic practices and policies under the  global tyranny of casino capitalism. Such a vision suggests resurrecting  a radical democratic project that provides the basis for imagining a  life beyond a social order immersed in massive inequality, endless  assaults on the environment, and elevates war and militarization to the  highest and most sanctified national ideals. Under such circumstances,  education becomes more than an obsession with accountability schemes, an  audit culture, market values, and an unreflective immersion in the  crude empiricism of a data-obsessed market-driven society. In addition,  it rejects the notion that all levels of schooling can be reduced to  sites for training students for the workforce and that the culture of  public and higher education is synonymous with the culture of business.   At issue here is the need for progressives to recognize the power of  education in creating the formative cultures necessary to both challenge  the various threats being mobilized against the ideas of justice and  democracy while also fighting for those public spheres, ideals, values,  and policies that offer alternative modes of identity, thinking, social  relations, and politics. But embracing the dictates of a making  education meaningful in order to make it critical and transformative  also means recognizing that cultural apparatuses such as the mainstream  media and Hollywood films are teaching machines and not simply sources  of information and entertainment. Such sites should be spheres of  struggle removed from the control of the financial elite and  corporations who use them as propaganda and disimagination machines.   Central to any viable notion of what makes pedagogy critical is, in  part, the recognition that it is a moral and political practice that is  always implicated in power relations because it narrates particular  versions and visions of civic life, community, the future, and how we  might construct representations of ourselves, others, and our physical  and social environment. It is in this respect that any discussion of  pedagogy must be attentive to how pedagogical practices work in a  variety of sites to produce particular ways in which identity, place,  worth, and above all value are organized and contribute to producing a  formative culture capable of sustaining a vibrant democracy.[4]   In this instance, pedagogy as the practice of freedom emphasizes  critical reflection, bridging the gap between learning and everyday  life, understanding the connection between power and difficult  knowledge, and extending democratic rights and identities by using the  resources of history and theory. However, among many educators,  progressives, and social theorists, there is a widespread refusal to  recognize that this form of education not only takes place in schools,  but is also part of what can be called the educative nature of the  culture. At the core of analysing and engaging culture as a pedagogical  practice are fundamental questions about the educative nature of the  culture, what it means to engage common sense as a way to shape and  influence popular opinion, and how diverse educational practices in  multiple sites can be used to challenge the vocabularies, practices, and  values of the oppressive forces that at work under neoliberal regimes  of power.   There is an urgent political need for the American public to  understand what it means for an authoritarian society to both weaponize  and trivialize the discourse, vocabularies, images, and aural means of  communication in a society. How is language used to relegate citizenship  to the singular pursuit of cravenly self-interests, legitimate shopping  as the ultimate expression of one’s identity, portray essential public  services as reinforcing and weakening any viable sense of individual  responsibility, and, among other, instances, using the language of war  and militarization to describe a vast array of problems we face as a  nation. War has become an addiction, the war on terror a Pavlovian  stimulant for control, and shared fears one of the few discourses  available for defining any vestige of solidarity.   Such falsehoods are now part of the reigning neoliberal ideology  proving once again that pedagogy is central to politics itself because  it is about changing the way people see things, recognizing that  politics is educative and that domination resided not simply in  repressive economic structures but also in the realm of ideas, beliefs,  and modes of persuasion. Just as I would argue that pedagogy has to be  made meaningful in order to be made critical and transformative, I think  it is fair to argue that there is no politics without a pedagogy of  identification; that is, people have to invest something of themselves  in how they are addressed or recognize that any mode of education,  argument, idea, or pedagogy has to speak to their condition and provide a  moment of recognition.   Lacking this understanding, pedagogy all too easily becomes a form of  symbolic and intellectual violence, one that assaults rather than  educates. Another example of such violence can be seen in the forms of  high stakes testing and empirically driven teaching that dominate public  schooling in the United States, which amounts to pedagogies of  repression which serve primarily to numb the mind and produce what might  be called dead zones of the imagination. These are pedagogies that are  largely disciplinary and have little regard for contexts, history,  making knowledge meaningful, or expanding what it means for students to  be critically engaged agents.   The fundamental challenge facing educators within the current age of  neoliberalism, militarism, and religious fundamentalism is to provide  the conditions for students to address how knowledge is related to the  power of both self-definition and social agency. In part, this suggests  providing students with the skills, ideas, values, and authority  necessary for them to nourish a substantive democracy, recognize  anti-democratic forms of power, and to fight deeply rooted injustices in  a society and world founded on systemic economic, racial, and gendered  inequalities. A as Hannah Arendt, once argued in “The Crisis of  Education,” the centrality of education to politics is also manifest in  the responsibility for the world that cultural workers have to assume  when they engage in pedagogical practices that lie on the side of belief  and persuasion, especially when they challenge forms of domination.   Such a project suggests developing a transformative pedagogy–rooted  in what might be called a project of resurgent and insurrectional  democracy–that relentlessly questions the kinds of labor, practices, and  forms of production that are enacted in schools and other sites of  education. The project in this sense speaks to the recognition that any  pedagogical practice presupposes some notion of the future, prioritises  some forms of identification over others, upholds selective modes of  social relations, and values some modes of knowing over others (think  about how business schools are held in high esteem while schools of  education are disdained and even the object in some cases of contempt).  Moreover, such a pedagogy does not offer guarantees as much as it  recognizes that its own position is grounded in particular modes of  authority, values, and ethical principles that must be constantly  debated for the ways in which they both open up and close down  democratic relations, values, and identities. These are precisely the  questions being asked by the Chicago Teachers’ Union in their brave  fight to regain some control over both the conditions of their work and  their efforts to redefine the meaning of schooling as a democratic  public sphere and learning in the interest of economic justice and  progressive social change.   Such a project should be principled, relational, contextual, as well  as self-reflective and theoretically rigorous. By relational, I mean  that the current crisis of schooling must be understood in relation to  the broader assault that is being waged against all aspects of  democratic public life. At the same time, any critical comprehension of  those wider forces that shape public and higher education must also be  supplemented by an attentiveness to the historical and conditional  nature of pedagogy itself. This suggests that pedagogy can never be  treated as a fixed set of principles and practices that can be applied  indiscriminately across a variety of pedagogical sites. Pedagogy is not  some recipe or methodological fix that can be imposed on all classrooms.  On the contrary, it must always be contextually defined, allowing it to  respond specifically to the conditions, formations, and problems that  arise in various sites in which education takes place. Such a project  suggests recasting pedagogy as a practice that is indeterminate, open to  constant revision, and constantly in dialogue with its own assumptions.   The notion of a neutral, objective education is an oxymoron.  Education and pedagogy do not exist outside of relations of power,  values, and politics. Ethics on the pedagogical front demands an  openness to the other, a willingness to engage a “politics of  possibility” through a continual critical engagement with texts, images,  events, and other registers of meaning as they are transformed into  pedagogical practices both within and outside of the classroom.    Pedagogy is never innocent and if it is to be understood and  problematized as a form of academic labor, cultural workers have the  opportunity not only to critically question and register their own  subjective involvement in how and what they teach in and out of schools,  but also to resist all calls to depoliticize pedagogy through appeals  to either scientific objectivity or ideological dogmatism. This suggests  the need for educators to rethink the cultural and ideological baggage  they bring to each educational encounter; it also highlights the  necessity of making educators ethically and politically accountable and  self-reflective for the stories they produce, the claims they make upon  public memory, and the images of the future they deem legitimate.  Understood as a form of militant hope, pedagogy in this sense is not an  antidote to politics, a nostalgic yearning for a better time, or for  some “inconceivably alternative future.” Instead, it is an “attempt to  find a bridge between the present and future in those forces within the  present which are potentially able to transform it.”[5]   At the dawn of the 21st century, the notion of the social and the  public are not being erased as much as they are being reconstructed  under circumstances in which public forums for serious debate, including  public education, are being eroded. Reduced either to a crude  instrumentalism, business culture, or defined as a purely private right  rather than a public good, our major educational apparatuses are removed  from the discourse of democracy and civic culture. Under the influence  of powerful financial interests, we have witnessed the takeover of  public and increasingly higher education and diverse media sites by a  corporate logic that both numbs the mind and the soul, emphasizing  repressive modes of ideology hat promote winning at all costs, learning  how not to question authority, and undermining the hard work of learning  how to be thoughtful, critical, and attentive to the power relations  that shape everyday life and the larger world. As learning is  privatized, depoliticized, and reduced to teaching students how to be  good consumers, any viable notions of the social, public values,  citizenship, and democracy wither and die.   As a central element of a broad based cultural politics, critical  pedagogy, in its various forms, when linked to the ongoing project of  democratization can provide opportunities for educators and other  cultural workers to redefine and transform the connections among  language, desire, meaning, everyday life, and material relations of  power as part of a broader social movement to reclaim the promise and  possibilities of a democratic public life. Critical pedagogy is  dangerous to many people and others because it provides the conditions  for students and the wider public to exercise their intellectual  capacities, embrace the ethical imagination, hold power accountable, and  embrace a sense of social responsibility.   One of the most serious challenges facing teachers, artists,  journalists, writers, and other cultural workers is the task of  developing a discourse of both critique and possibility. This means  developing discourses and pedagogical practices that connect reading the  word with reading the world, and doing so in ways that enhance the  capacities of young people as critical agents and engaged citizens. In  taking up this project, educators and others should attempt to create  the conditions that give students the opportunity to become critical and  engaged citizens who have the knowledge and courage to struggle in  order to make desolation and cynicism unconvincing and hope practical.  But raising consciousness is not enough. Students need to be inspired  and energized to address important social issues, learning to narrate  their private troubles as public issues, and to engage in forms of  resistance that are both local and collective, while connecting such  struggles to more global issues.   Democracy begins to fail and political life becomes impoverished in  the absence of those vital public spheres such as public and higher  education in which civic values, public scholarship, and social  engagement allow for a more imaginative grasp of a future that takes  seriously the demands of justice, equity, and civic courage. Democracy  should be a way of thinking about education, one that thrives on  connecting equity to excellence, learning to ethics, and agency to the  imperatives of social responsibility and the public good. The question  regarding what role education should play in democracy becomes all the  more urgent at a time when the dark forces of authoritarianism are on  the march in the United States. As public values, trust, solidarities,  and modes of education are under siege, the discourses of hate, racism,  rabid self-interest, and greed are exercising a poisonous influence in  American society, most evident in the discourse of the right-wing  extremists such as Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, vying for the American  presidency. Civic illiteracy collapses opinion and informed arguments,  erases collective memory, and becomes complicit with the militarization  of both individual, public spaces, and society itself. Under such  circumstances, politicians such as Hilary Clinton are labeled as  liberals when in reality they are firm advocates for both a toxic  militarism and the interests of the financial elites.   All across the country, there are signs of hope. Young people are  protesting against student debt; environmentalists are aggressively  fighting corporate interests; the Chicago Teachers Union is waging a  brave fight against oppressive neoliberal modes of governance; Black  youth are bravely resisting and exposing state violence in all of its  forms; prison abolitionists are making their voices heard, and once  again the threat of a nuclear winter is being widely discussed. In the  age of financial and political monsters, neoliberalism has lost its  ability to legitimate itself in a warped discourse of freedom and  choice. Its poisonous tentacles have put millions out of work, turned  many Black communities into war zones, destroyed public education,  flagrantly pursued war as the greatest of national ideals, turned the  prison system into a default institution for punishing minorities of  race and class, pillaged the environment, and blatantly imposed a new  mode of racism under the silly notion of a post-racial society.   The extreme violence perpetuated in the daily spectacles of the  cultural apparatuses are now becoming more visible in the relations of  everyday life making it more difficult for many American to live the lie  that they are real and active participants in a democracy. As the lies  are exposed, the economic and political crises ushering in  authoritarianism are now being matched by a crisis of ideas. If this  momentum of growing critique and collective resistance continues, the  support we see for Bernie Sanders among young people will be matched by  an increase in the growth of other oppositional groups. Groups organized  around single issues such as an insurgent labor movements, those groups  trying to reclaim public education as a public good, and other emerging  movements will come together hopefully, refusing to operate within the  parameters of established power while working to create a broad-based  social movement. In the merging of the power, culture,  new public spheres, new technologies, and old and new social movements,  there is a hint of a new collective political sensibility emerging, one  that offers a new mode of collective resistance and the possibility of  taking democracy off life-support. This is not a struggle over who will  be elected the next president or ruling party of the United States, but a  struggle over those who are willing to fight for a radical democracy  and those who are not. The strong winds of resistance are in the air,  rattling established interests, forcing liberals to recognize their  complicity with established power, and giving new life the meaning of  what it means to fight for a democratic social order in which equity and  justice prevail for everyone.   Notes.   [1] Chris Hedges, “The War on Language”, TruthDig, (September 28, 2009)   online at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20090928_the_war_on_language/   [2] Nicole Aschoff, “The Smartphone Society,” Jacobin Magazine, Issue 17, (Spring 2015). Online at: https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/03/smartphone-usage-technology-aschoff/   [3] Gary Olson and Lynn Worsham, “Staging the Politics of Difference: Homi Bhabha’s Critical Literacy,” Journal of Advanced Composition (1999), pp. 3-35.   [4]. Henry A. Giroux, Education and the Crisis of Public Values, 2nd edition (New York: Peter Lang, 2015).   [5]. Terry Eagleton, The Idea of Culture (Malden, MA: Basil Blackwell, 2000), p.22.
 Henry A. Giroux currently holds the McMaster  University Chair for Scholarship in the Public Interest in the English  and Cultural Studies Department and a Distinguished Visiting  Professorship at Ryerson University. His most recent books are America’s Education Deficit and the War on Youth (Monthly Review Press, 2013) and Neoliberalism’s War on Higher Education (Haymarket Press, 2014). His web site is www.henryagiroux.com.
 |