Accounting for Oneself in Teaching: Trust, Parrhesia, and Bad Faith

Author:

Brady Alison M.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThis paper seeks to reconceptualise the basis for trusting teachers in current educational discourses. It proposes moving away from trust based on ‘absolute accuracy’ to trust as encapsulated in the practice of parrhesia. On the surface, parrhesia appears to be the opposite of Sartre’s concept of ‘bad faith’. Paradoxically, however, our attempts to be sincere in our accounts are inevitably tainted by this. This paradox is especially evident in autobiographical writing, an activity that is both parrhesiastic in nature and susceptible to bad faith. This does not mean that we should abandon trust in these ways of accounting for oneself, however. Rather, parrhesiastic practices in autobiographical writing can offer a different understanding of how we account for ourselves and our practices, one that does not pertain to a narrow definition of truth as accuracy, but instead leads to a form of self-criticism where one situates oneself in relation to the ‘truth’ of their accounts in new ways. Towards the end of the paper, I explore three ‘parrhesiastic techniques’ and their relationship to accounting for oneself as a teacher, to reimagine these techniques from technicist to existential ways of relating to our practices.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Philosophy,Education

Reference30 articles.

1. Ball, S. J. 2019. A horizon of freedom: using Foucault to think differently about education and learning. Power and Education 11 (2): 132–144.

2. Brady, A. M. 2022. Early career anxieties in the university: the crisis of institutional bad faith. In The promise of the university, ed. A. Mahon, 67–78. Cham, Switzerland.p: reclaiming humanity, humility and hope, Springer.

3. Brady, A. M. 2020a. From the reflective to the post-personal in teaching. Teoría de la Educación: Revisita Interuniversitaria 32 (1): 55–71.

4. Brady, A. M. 2020b. Struggling teachers and the recognition of effective practice. Journal of Philosophy of Education 54 (1): 183–200.

5. Brady, A. M. 2020c. Response and responsibility: rethinking accountability in education. Journal of Philosophy of Education. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9752.12501.

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