Autonomy and Social Movements Today?
Each of the educational movements I have considered in this chapter explicitly recognized the need for institutional autonomy as part of educating for social change. These radical schools conceived of literacy in broad terms that included valorizing vernacular language, collective definition, and particular strategies for intervening in the existing hegemony. While writing and language skills were important in these institutions, it can be argued that they began in a different place from most academics. That is, each of these institutions began by responding to literacy needs of particular social movements. Formal language instruction was a tactical issue for social movements—that is, the schools recognized the importance of being able to write in official dialects in order to make their case in public forums such as newspapers. However, learning the official dialect was not a prerequisite for oppositional literacy. All of these schools emphasized that using academic language or even “proper English” could actually interfere with one’s ability to organize. Each school developed educational programs to speak to the communities they sought to serve and help develop the skills necessary for building revolutionary movements. While the Modern Schools and the Labor Colleges could not sustain themselves once the movements that had supported them had faded or had been crushed by the state and official political institutions, Highlander continually sought out emerging social movements. As shown above, Highlander’s goal was to eventually make its presence in social movements obsolete by helping foster grassroots leadership.
As movements against neoliberal globalization take root on campuses, in communities, and throughout the world, critical and radical composition teachers can benefit from the legacies of the educational experiments I considered in this chapter. In particular, how can critical and radical teachers rethink the relationship between classroom pedagogy and the literacy needs of social movements? Is it even possible to create autonomous educational spaces in this age of neoliberalism? Have colleges and universities become so intertwined with the needs of corporate America that they cannot be sites for radical social change? In the next chapter, I will discuss several recent developments in composition that offer possibilities for reconsidering questions of autonomy and social movements. Composition’s recent interest in service-learning, public and counter-public spheres, and critical technological literacy offer important bridges to reconnecting critical and radical pedagogy to the new mass movements against neoliberal globalization.
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