Work, Subjectivity and Learning: Understanding Learning through Working Life

Front Cover
Stephen Billett, Tara Fenwick, Margaret Somerville
Springer Science & Business Media, 2007 M06 3 - 276 pages

In recent year, efforts to understand learning for and throughout working life have moved away from a focus on workplace training to concerns about learning as a component and outcome of engaging in work and work-related activities and interactions. This shift acknowledges a broader set of workplace factors that shape workers’ learning and development. Yet equally, it acknowledges that this learning through engagement is also necessarily shaped by the diverse ways that individuals elect to engage or participate in workplace activities. Central here is the issue of individuals’ subjectivity and how this is shaped by but shapes engagement in work and, therefore, what learning flows from their participation. It is in considering the relations among subjectivity, learning and work that it is possible to advance both the conceptual and procedural bases for understanding learning through and for working life. Moreover, the focus on relations among subjectivity, work and learning represents a point of convergence for diverse disciplinary traditions and practices that are provided by the book’s contributors. In this way, the contributions represent something of the emerging perspectives that are elaborating the complex relations among subjectivity, work and learning, and circumstances in which they are played out.

From inside the book

Contents

Learning to Work the Boundaries
21
Subjectivity
37
Learning and Experience
53
Learning What to Wear
69
Shifting Workers Across and Beyond
86
Exploring Construction of Gendered Identities at Work
105
Epistemological Beliefs and Their Impact on Work
123
and Interpretation of Constraints in Working Life
133
Developing Subjective Identities Through Collective
157
Governmentality Subjectivity
178
Farm Women
195
Immigrant
212
Workers Subjectivity and Decent Work
229
Prospects and Issues 247
246
Author Index
267
Subject Index
273

Personal Agency and Epistemology at Work
141

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Page 89 - ... interpellate', speak to us or hail us into place as the social subjects of particular discourses, and on the other hand, the processes which produce subjectivities, which construct us as subjects which can be 'spoken'.
Page 39 - ideology," but through the organization and regulation of the time, space, and movements of our daily lives, our bodies are trained, shaped, and impressed with the stamp of prevailing historical forms of selfhood, desire, masculinity, femininity.
Page 185 - ... individuals. It is not applied to them. It is therefore, I think, a mistake to think of the individual as a sort of elementary nucleus, a primitive atom or some multiple, inert matter to which power is applied, or which is struck by a power that subordinates or destrovs individuals. In actual fact, one of the first effects of power is that it allows bodies, gestures, discourses, and desires to be identified and constituted as something individual, The individual is not, in other words, power's...
Page 26 - For if the subject is constituted by power, that power does not cease at the moment the subject is constituted, for that subject is never fully constituted, but is subjected and produced time and again. That subject is neither a ground nor a product, but the permanent possibility of a certain resignifying process, one which gets detoured and stalled through other mechanisms of power, but which is power's own possibility of being reworked.
Page 265 - Equity and workplace learning: emerging discourses and conditions of possibility', in D. Boud (ed.) Current Issues and New Agendas in Workplace Learning, Adelaide: National Centre for Vocational Education and Research, 89-109.
Page 154 - Billett, S. (2001). Learning in the workplace: Strategies for effective practice. Sydney: Allen and Unwin. Billett, S. (2002). Workplace pedagogic practices: Co-participation and learning. British Journal of Educational Studies, 50(4), 457-481.
Page 39 - ... to show how deployments of power are directly connected to the body - to bodies, functions, physiological processes, sensations, and pleasures; far from the body having to be effaced, what is needed is to make it visible through an analysis in which the biological and the historical are not consecutive to one another...

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