Loading...
Author Response: Provocative Education: From Buddhism for Busy People® to Dismal Land ®
Wall, Tony
Wall, Tony
Advisors
Editors
Other Contributors
Affiliation
EPub Date
Publication Date
2016-03-11
Submitted Date
Files
Loading...
Pre-press draft
Microsoft Word XML, 36.24 KB
Other Titles
Abstract
When we engage with Žižekian thought, we might conceptualise contemporary education as part of wider machinery to perpetuate and deepen the grasp capitalism has in a globalising world (also see Furedi, 2006, 2010). We might see how ideas, knowledge, and ‘everything else’ (c.f. Hawking, 2001, 2007) can and is packaged up into forms that are easily consumed by audiences buying the educational objects. Such processes of commodification actively render objects to the audience for sale, and appear across all spheres of human activity; this is why we must remember that according to some philosophical stances, the signified has a slippery relationship with the signifier (c.f. Lacau and Mouffee, 1985). Three examples help animate this phenomenon and some of the different consequences of it. The first example illustrates how commodification can apply to areas of life that we might think of as difficult to capture spiritually or experientially: now, for time-poor people who want to quickly reap the existential benefits of Buddhism, there is a wide range of easily accessible texts at affordable prices to choose from. Titles include “Buddhism for Busy People”, “Buddhism Plain and Simple”, “The Little Book of Buddhism”, “Buddhism Made Simple”, “Buddhism: for Beginners!”, “Buddhism for Dummies”, “Sit Like A Buddha”, “Hurry Up and Meditate”, “Enlightenment to Go”, and “The Dalai Lama's Cat”. In and through such texts, commodified versions of Buddhism appear, much the same way as Buddha-like statues appear in NASA photos of Mars (Feltman, 2015).
Citation
Wall, T. (2016). Author Response: Provocative Education: From Buddhism for Busy People® to Dismal Land ®. Studies in Philosophy and Education, 35(6), 649-53. http://doi.org/10.1007/s11217-016-9521-8
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Studies in Philosophy and Education
Research Unit
DOI
10.1007/s11217-016-9521-8
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Type
Article
Language
en
Description
The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11217-016-9521-8
Series/Report no.
ISSN
0039-3746
EISSN
1573-191X
