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This book critically interrogates the function of schooling in the
United States of America using the writings of sociologist Zygmunt
Bauman. Asking whether the function is to produce citizens,
workers, a combination of the two, or something altogether
different, it argues that the designs of schooling are part of a
carefully crafted ordering, illustrated via an analysis of the ways
in which schooling introduces students to various forms of coercion
and seduction that socialize students in particular ways: ways that
support an order. By engaging with the prolific and insightful
works of one of the most prominent social thinkers of the 21st
century, this book considers schooling and its contributions to
order. Be they solid or liquid modern ordering mechanisms, ordering
through repression and seduction, or supporting ordering through
the creation of boundaries separating an "orderly inside" from its
"disorderly outside"; schools imperfectly support the construction
of order and in doing so, privilege some representations and
individuals over others. To order is to harness ambivalence and
steer it in directions that privilege the "in" group at the expense
of the "out" group; and schools, from the curriculum they teach to
the values and ideas they promote, are desirable captive
marketplaces instrumental in steering this ambivalence. The author
ultimately suggests that the function of schools, whether
recognized or not, are not so much to educate students to be free
thinkers, but rather to be orderly cogs in a particular functional
social machine. As such, it will be of interest to faculty,
scholars and postgraduate-level students with interests in the
sociology of education, schooling, sociology, and social theory.
Sometimes Christians--even those of us who have been following
Jesus for a long time--have a sense of something missing. We feel
that we should be more comfortable and confident in our
relationship with God. We wonder, Shouldn't I be more capable,
peaceful, joyful, and spiritual? We are hungry for more. Pastors
Rob King and Eric Ferris explore this longing of "something
missing" in their effective and inspirational new release by
explaining how you can experience an ongoing, renewable, increasing
awareness of the Holy Spirit within.
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