| Jean-François Lyotard - 1984 - 142 pages
...functions, The same reasoning is a fortiori valid for the foundation of properly scientific institutions. The State resorts to the narrative of freedom every...in order to point them down the path of progress. 107 With the second narrative of legitimation, the relation between science, the nation, and the State... | |
| Simon Marginson - 1997 - 306 pages
...that increased its popular appeal, especially on the Labor side of politics. Lyotard comments that 'the State resorts to the narrative of freedom every...in order to point them down the path of progress' (Lyotard 1984: 32). By presenting the reform and expansion of education as egalitarian, modernising... | |
| Kerry J. Kennedy - 1997 - 208 pages
...sees this as symptomatic of the constraining nature of citizenship based on nationhood. In his view, ‘The State resorts to the narrative of freedom every...in order to point them down the path of progress' (Lyotard, 1984, p. 32). There is little doubs that national histories have seen the development of... | |
| Victor J. Vitanza - 1997 - 444 pages
...the basis. The first, however, only appears to favor the social subject; for, as Lyotard explains, “the State resorts to the narrative of freedom every time it assumes dire ct cont rol over the training of the ‘people,' under the name of the ‘nation,' in order to... | |
| Leonhard Praeg - 2000 - 376 pages
...was supposed to win its freedom through the spread of new domains of knowledge to the population ... The State resorts to the narrative of freedom every...‘nation', in order to point them down the path of progress (1988:32). The second narrative that serves to legitimate knowledge, the speculative unity of all knowledge,... | |
| Madeleine Arnot, Jo-Anne Dillabough - 2000 - 356 pages
...implicated in sustaining this illusory process whilst also regulating citizens. As Lyotard (1984) argues: ‘The State resorts to the narrative of freedom every...in order to point them down the path of progress' (quoted in Gilbert 1992: 54). Women and those individuals and groups who were defined as ‘others'... | |
| Madeleine Arnot, Jo-Anne Dillabough - 2000 - 360 pages
...citizens. As Lyotard (1984) argues: ‘The State resorts to the narrative of freedom every time it assurnes direct control over the training of the “people”,...in order to point them down the path of progress' (quoted in Gilbert 1992: 54). Women and those individuals and groups who were defined as ‘others'... | |
| David MacFadyen - 2002 - 286 pages
...political opponents. Such an argument is often employed in a simplistic manner for political ends. 'The State resorts to the narrative of freedom every...in order to point them down the path of progress." 10 The second type of narrative is not political, but philosophical; it is complex, not simple, and... | |
| Del Loewenthal, Robert Snell - 2003 - 228 pages
...functions. The same reasoning is a fortiori valid for the foundation of properly scientific institutions. The State resorts to the narrative of freedom every time it assumes direct control over she training of the ‘people', under the name of the ‘nation', in order to point them down the path... | |
| Antony Easthope, Kate McGowan - 2004 - 310 pages
...functions. The same reasoning is a fortiori valid for the foundation of properly scientific institutions. The State resorts to the narrative of freedom every...in order to point them down the path of progress.' With the second narrative of legitimation, the relation between science, the nation, and the State... | |
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