The Formation of Public Professional Radical Consciousness: The Example of Anti-Racism
- 1 May 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociology
- Vol. 27 (2) , 281-297
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038593027002007
Abstract
This paper presents a theory and case study of the formation of public professional radicalism. Theories of `new class' and `middle class' radicalism are criticise for neglecting the experiential context in which political consciousness is formed. A similar critique is made of Offe's analysis of the political contradictions of the welfare state. It is suggested that public professionals resolve their contradictory experiences of welfare capitalism into forms of rhetoric and action that combine `non-market' and `pro-market' values. This process is identified as the formation of ideology. Interviews with anti-racist educationalists in London and Tyneside are introduced to exemplify this argument. Five ideologies are discussed. Three (the notions of anti-racism as `good education', as an exercise in `consciousness raising', and as part of `the Black struggle') were articulated in both study sites. Two others (the notions of `local sensitivity', and `the gentle approach') were distinct to Tyneside. The paper concludes by noting the salience of a geographically sensitive approach to the analysis of public professional radical consciousnessKeywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ideology and Modern CultureBritish Journal of Sociology, 1992
- ANTI-RACISM IN 'WHITE' AREAS: THE EXAMPLE OF TYNESIDE*Antipode, 1992
- Anti‐racism as a Radical Educational Ideology in London and TynesideOxford Review of Education, 1990
- New-class dissent among social-cultural specialists: The effects of occupational self-direction and location in the public sectorSociological Forum, 1988
- II. Democracy Against the Welfare State?Political Theory, 1987
- Anti‐racist education in non‐contact areas: The need for a gentle approachNew Community, 1986
- Social class and social liberalismSociological Forum, 1986
- "New-Class" and Cumulative Trend Explanations of the Liberal Political Attitudes of ProfessionalsAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1984
- Environmentalism, Middle-Class Radicalism and PoliticsSociological Review, 1980
- Two Types of Middle-Class Labour Voter?British Journal of Political Science, 1975