Sunday, 8 June 2014

scouring the web

a cold clay bowl rests within a birch
overflowing, this exceptional receptacle
resolves in bounded space
that has no place
at intervals, beyond the tree or among it: there
odes owe to writing the class of letter
Victorieusement fui le suicide
that elsewhereness of writing's ploy
writing's dilettantish mistress not loving loves the turn else without these leave-takes

oh lend a place an inside,
where I leaving have a grace

Friday, 7 March 2014

On Education in the UK and Why I am supporting the strike on March 26th


Education is the UK is in crisis. Over the year-and-a-half period of my sixth-form life the Department of Education has enacted a systematic campaign of violence against this country's schools, colleges and universities. Teachers'  financial and career security has been put under risk amongst an increasingly claustrophobic culture of fear. Fixed pay scale points has been ceded to performance related pay has supervened, and teachers will be 15% worse off in real terms under this Government. Placing teachers' pay decisions under senior management opens up the payroll to bullying and control. Professionals and students are instructed that the transmission of ideas should become a political issue. A recent study by the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) concluded, “the overall picture reveals no relationship between average student performance in a country and the use of performance-based pay schemes”[1]. We are party to the neo-liberal ploy of monetising every aspect of our once sacrosanct public services thereby defiling an area of life that must remain beyond the world of finance. The lot of the class of '14 has been to witness the failure of our hopes: the verdant prospect of reasonably priced higher education had morphed into a horrific concatenation of increasing student debt, overworked lecturers struggling to maintain tenure on threadbare salaries, and underpaid domestic staff  kept on their sub-living wage contracts only by lack of other work available. At college, haggard, overworked staff struggling to respond to the daily challenges of prescriptive classroom teaching supplemented by the  Sisyphean task of marking appears an unforgiving yet ubiquitous spectacle. Of course, no teacher is able to speak out beyond union involvement, but this is superfluous: in the tired looks and throwaway satirical remarks about Gove, a resentment towards an increasingly monolithic and repressive educational apparatus is all-too-obviously immanent.

In short, what we are witnessing under this current Tory government is a war on our fundamental ideal of affordable world-class education consigned to the past so as to future the programme of the centre-right ideologue. Trotsky wrote in 1922 through education “we form the concrete human beings of our epoch”. What we are forming in the UK is a polarised division of the clever and the lucky against the rest. The outcome is clear: by making education an increasingly unattractive career option for graduates the number of staff will decline. We will see harassed, overworked teachers unable to prepare adequately for their timetables of over-full classes. We will see a decline in the conditions of college facilities, events, and extra-curricular activities. Knowledge and enjoyment shall become increasingly the exclusive preserve of the “gifted and talented”, that wonderfully vague signification eliding the truth: the rich and the clever who are prepared to keep quiet about the depreciating conditions will preside, and all else confined to the dustbin of zero-hour contracts. With the withdrawal of EMA in 2010, a £30 a week subsidy for students from low income households that  2010,  this government's stance on the vulnerable became clear: to separate the student demographic and exclude the poor from access to education and the potential assertion to stronger economic positions. I now have a friend who is often unable to feed himself whilst at school. But we are all marginalised, forced into what at worst seem like thetic qualifications whilst the government demolish the pedagogic architecture of our once world-class state education system.

The department of Education is forestalling the potential of its citizens to accede to the same positions they did - rejecting not juwantst a generation but the future nation. As we tend towards  an American, finance-based model students remain powerless to formulate a response because all of the channels are -violently- foreclosed. We watch the staff who care for us and work for us pushed to the limits of capability as the form of education the government prescribes requires a precise model for the teacher to assume.  The only outlet is the occasional action organised by the NUS, an organisation notionally with students' interests at heart but substantially in the thrall of the Labour party. If we wish to accede to this increasingly calcified pedestal of traditional legitimisation we must be prepared to cast off of any hope of security or support. The alienation which Marx writes of (here a propos religion):

 “becomes the spirit of egoism, the bellum omnium contra omnes. It is no longer the essence of community but the essence of division ... It has been tossed among various private interests and exiled from the community”[2].

Is this not exactly what we see happening to our education system? It is increasingly subjected to the laws of capital, the perverse degrading logic by which we find ourselves in a progressively more hostile pedagogic environment. Abiding by strict notions of what knowledge consists of is more valuable than intellectual or creative ability. We increasingly can't support each other in learning because we are fighting each other for respect and jobs. For example, Gove would like to remove careers advisers from schools[3] to further his programme of fear and obfuscation. The very idea of collective resistance is foreclosed under the workings of the ideological apparatus incessantly reminding us of the necessity to become useful: this hysterical discourse of ordering the impossible has become the endemic demand of the state institution within late capitalism[4].

The government has cut fast this year, culminating in the announcement by Danny Alexander that student debt would be partially privatised[5], shifting the graduate's lot from being debt-laden to toxic. To the financial system, progressively assuming the insidious role of arbiter of worth, we will be worse than nothing, subjects which exist only to owe to business.  In the current climate there is little assurance of employment awaiting. But still we are instructed not to disrupt the functioning of the superior discourse of Power.

Therefore, when the NUT staff strike on the 26th March I shall walk out of college too, as will hundreds of others, tired of the persecution, tired of pretending that this is acceptable, tired of false genuflection. The message is support for the teachers who seek to create a system where the academic discourse is open, and who desire to see students and teachers represented in mutual harmony rather than obscured behind  financial scrivening. Students' persecution by the state will be foremost in the consciousness of the thousands of students at my school, ready to be discussed and militantly defended at every campus they reach. What we require is a belief in the capability of the state to aid rather than control, to guide rather than force.


1: http://www.oecd.org/pisa/pisaproducts/pisainfocus/50328990.pdf
2: http://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons-committees/Education/EdC181213.pdf
3: Writings of the Young Marx on Philosophy and Society p.277  (Anchor Books: 1967)
4: For the textbook discussion of this "the reproduction of the conditions of production" I refer the reader to Althusser's Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses: http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/althusser/1970/ideology.htm
Whilst the concept is expounded is insufficiently developed there (or elsewhere by Althusser himself) it remains essential reading for anyone concerned with the politics of education.
5:https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/speech-by-chief-secretary-to-the-treasury-danny-alexander-investing-in-britains-future

Friday, 3 January 2014

Within Prospect's Figure

`So the Soul's motion does not end in bliss' - Katherine Philips

I
When it was still in season
to regard oneself as growing
not straight a dull cedars
guarded in the breeze, from singular frost
by a singular gardener who tends likewise
the shallow crocuses with remonstration -
almost as base as the tongue of frost
twixt four and five which grew them into pastels,
to forgive his sleep. Life is idolatrous. Or
ease him into forgetting.
More either, admirable what is not
that was a finer modulation to its essence.
The scene was a slowly collapsing festoonment as
a grey trunk to reveal night.

II
Whether from our own order, the furtive
abetting what is new amounts to the contortions of this life,
the crisp cut heads of autumnal radiance made slow.
In gasping outwards there is new growth.
You grown cold with the human wish, there can be, there must be
a returning as Phoebus intoxicated at night
and a fall that is not a redolent stump.
Which happens so we point skyward
sloven in outer retreats, the empty dance
of the native hermit's boyant nepenthe
his comic apperception of swell's fall
will drown again the self's entent.

III
Who was it that when the sense of closure,
knowed and returned its deeds, stalling on the threshold
bearing down his tender excoriations
to bring it apart again? The touch.