Subscribing school: Digital platforms, affective attachments, and cruel optimism in a Danish public primary school

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Subscribing school : Digital platforms, affective attachments, and cruel optimism in a Danish public primary school. / Cone, Lucas.

I: Critical Studies in Education, 16.10.2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Cone, L 2023, 'Subscribing school: Digital platforms, affective attachments, and cruel optimism in a Danish public primary school', Critical Studies in Education. https://doi.org/10.1080/17508487.2023.2269425

APA

Cone, L. (2023). Subscribing school: Digital platforms, affective attachments, and cruel optimism in a Danish public primary school. Critical Studies in Education. https://doi.org/10.1080/17508487.2023.2269425

Vancouver

Cone L. Subscribing school: Digital platforms, affective attachments, and cruel optimism in a Danish public primary school. Critical Studies in Education. 2023 okt. 16. https://doi.org/10.1080/17508487.2023.2269425

Author

Cone, Lucas. / Subscribing school : Digital platforms, affective attachments, and cruel optimism in a Danish public primary school. I: Critical Studies in Education. 2023.

Bibtex

@article{98e82556fc6f42aab7a590ca804028fe,
title = "Subscribing school: Digital platforms, affective attachments, and cruel optimism in a Danish public primary school",
abstract = "This article explores the affective and situated aspects of enacting public schooling within a burgeoning economy of digital platforms. Drawing on a series of conversations with two teachers and two school leaders at a Danish primary school, the article examines how the increasing involvement of educational platforms in schools reshapes who and what matters in the everyday life of the school. The article highlights different ways in which platforms entangle with educational practices and relations beyond their functional promises to save time, promote efficiency, solve administrative issues, and other related tasks. As generative forces based on relocating educational phenomena within a proprietary digital architecture, the analysis illustrates how the involvement of platforms becomes co-constitutive of new forms of affective attachments and loyalty that challenge historical configurations of pluralism in public schools. Drawing on these constitutive effects, the article introduces Lauren Berlant{\textquoteright}s notion of cruel optimism to discuss the implications of sustaining public schooling within a largely unregulated economy of platform subscriptions. The article{\textquoteright}s discussions call for closer political and scholarly attention to the educational consequences of enacting school within the economic conditions of current platform capitalism.",
author = "Lucas Cone",
year = "2023",
month = oct,
day = "16",
doi = "10.1080/17508487.2023.2269425",
language = "English",
journal = "Critical Studies in Education",
issn = "1750-8487",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Subscribing school

T2 - Digital platforms, affective attachments, and cruel optimism in a Danish public primary school

AU - Cone, Lucas

PY - 2023/10/16

Y1 - 2023/10/16

N2 - This article explores the affective and situated aspects of enacting public schooling within a burgeoning economy of digital platforms. Drawing on a series of conversations with two teachers and two school leaders at a Danish primary school, the article examines how the increasing involvement of educational platforms in schools reshapes who and what matters in the everyday life of the school. The article highlights different ways in which platforms entangle with educational practices and relations beyond their functional promises to save time, promote efficiency, solve administrative issues, and other related tasks. As generative forces based on relocating educational phenomena within a proprietary digital architecture, the analysis illustrates how the involvement of platforms becomes co-constitutive of new forms of affective attachments and loyalty that challenge historical configurations of pluralism in public schools. Drawing on these constitutive effects, the article introduces Lauren Berlant’s notion of cruel optimism to discuss the implications of sustaining public schooling within a largely unregulated economy of platform subscriptions. The article’s discussions call for closer political and scholarly attention to the educational consequences of enacting school within the economic conditions of current platform capitalism.

AB - This article explores the affective and situated aspects of enacting public schooling within a burgeoning economy of digital platforms. Drawing on a series of conversations with two teachers and two school leaders at a Danish primary school, the article examines how the increasing involvement of educational platforms in schools reshapes who and what matters in the everyday life of the school. The article highlights different ways in which platforms entangle with educational practices and relations beyond their functional promises to save time, promote efficiency, solve administrative issues, and other related tasks. As generative forces based on relocating educational phenomena within a proprietary digital architecture, the analysis illustrates how the involvement of platforms becomes co-constitutive of new forms of affective attachments and loyalty that challenge historical configurations of pluralism in public schools. Drawing on these constitutive effects, the article introduces Lauren Berlant’s notion of cruel optimism to discuss the implications of sustaining public schooling within a largely unregulated economy of platform subscriptions. The article’s discussions call for closer political and scholarly attention to the educational consequences of enacting school within the economic conditions of current platform capitalism.

U2 - 10.1080/17508487.2023.2269425

DO - 10.1080/17508487.2023.2269425

M3 - Journal article

JO - Critical Studies in Education

JF - Critical Studies in Education

SN - 1750-8487

ER -

ID: 371311382