Affiliation:
1. Melbourne Graduate School of Education
Abstract
In this paper I examine the intersections between a general commitment to education and learning and the moral and ethical dimensions of the work ethic under contemporary capitalism. Drawing on Kathi Weeks' (2011) recent exploration of the work ethic in The Problem with Work, I suggest there is a relationship between the form and function of the work ethic- and what I term the ‘learning ethic’. I suggest that commitment to a learning ethic, to the unreserved power of learning and education- may reiterate a moral commitment to the personal characteristics that define the work ethic under capitalism. As a consequence, consideration of the form and function of these moral character ideals in the continuation of unequal social relations across educational and workspaces, become obfuscated by a generalized celebration of learning, education and self-work.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
29 articles.
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