The Educational Implications of the Atomistic Family Structure : How the Atomization of the Family Undermines the Education of Critical Citizens by Making People Vulnerable to Indoctrination and Propaganda
Puolimatka, T. (2017). The Educational Implications of the Atomistic Family Structure : How the Atomization of the Family Undermines the Education of Critical Citizens by Making People Vulnerable to Indoctrination and Propaganda. Acta Paedagogica Vilnensia, 38, 176-191. https://doi.org/10.15388/ActPaed.2017.38.10800
Published in
Acta Paedagogica VilnensiaAuthors
Date
2017Copyright
© Puolimatka & Acta Paedagogica Vilnensia, 2017. This is an open access journal published by Vilniaus Universiteto Leidykla.
This article uses historical and sociological research as the basis for a philosophically argued
thesis about the negative educational consequences of the atomization of the family structure.
Carle Zimmerman’s theory of the social causality involved in the atomistic family structure is
illustrated with an example of a Bolshevik social experiment and applied to the atomization of the
modern Western family as shown by contemporary social science research. The focus is on the ways
that the atomization of the family undermines the education of children into autonomous and critical
citizens. Once the normative structures of marriage and family disintegrate, the identity and
relationship rights of children are violated. This violation is often experienced by children as a rejection.
Such a rejection wounds children morally and undermines their faith in moral norms. Furthermore,
the disintegration of the family leaves children in a state of emotional and moral deprivation,
which undermines their ontological security and their development into autonomous moral
agents and critical citizens. By exposing them to the emotional influence of the cultural myths used
in propaganda and indoctrination, these deprivations make them externally-directed instead of
developing their capacity for autonomous deliberation and independent moral agency. Insofar as
citizen’s views and attitudes are directed from the outside, they fail to function as a counterbalance
to the ruling elites, and democracy deteriorates into elite rule.
...
Publisher
Vilniaus Universiteto LeidyklaISSN Search the Publication Forum
1392-5016Keywords
Original source
http://www.zurnalai.vu.lt/acta-paedagogica-vilnensia/article/view/10800/8895Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/27152690
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Fostering language awareness through Citizen Science : results and implications of a project with Polish teenagers doing language-related research
Molek-Kozakowska, Katarzyna; Laihonen, Petteri (Taylor & Francis, 2024)This article reports on the rationale, implementation, results and evaluation of four rounds of co-creative Citizen Science (CS) projects (2021–2024) conducted with 10 public secondary schools in Opole, Poland. These ... -
Social Media as an Opinion Formulator : A Study on Implications and Recent Developments
Jameel, Tanzeela; Ali, Rukhsana; Malik, Kamran Ahmed (IEEE, 2019)Social media has a great influence on how information reaches us and how we form an opinion based on it. For many users, social media increases the variety of information and ensure its accessibility across different ... -
Citizen Engagement and Entrepreneurship : Implications for Sustainable Tourism Development
Sigala, Marianna; Ukpabi, Dandison (Springer, 2019)Research has not investigated the use of competitions-hackathons as a citizen engagement tool to motivate and activate citizen’s engagement in entrepreneurship driving sustainable tourism development. This paper fills ... -
Building and Testing a Comparative Interface on Northwest European Historical Parliamentary Debates : Relative Term Frequency Analysis of British Representative Democracy
Ihalainen, Pasi; Janssen, Berit; Marjanen, Jani; Vaara, Ville (RWTH Aachen, 2022)Tensions between the people and parliament over representation are a normal feature of representative democracies. In this paper, we demonstrate how digital humanities analysis tools help in answering questions about the ... -
Nothing just-is. The depiction of socio-economic (in)justice in ELT coursebooks and its implications for young learners
Alter, Grit (Soveltavan kielentutkimuksen keskus, Jyväskylän yliopisto; Kielikoulutuspolitiikan verkosto, 2021)One of my fields of research is coursebook analysis. I consider coursebooks to be much more than only teaching materials for specific subjects. Coursebooks also represent what a society considers to be worthy of being ...