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Pupil mortification: digital photography and identity construction in classroom assessment
Cultural theorists have illuminated how photographic images contribute to autobiographical remembering and identity formation. This has new significance given that digital photography now allows personal images to circulate rapidly amongst peer groups. Taking these insights into classroom contexts, this paper draws on recent case-study data to explore a teacher’s use of digital photography to provide ‘feedback’ to pupils. Critiquing dominant psychological understandings of classroom assessment for their lack of recognition of power relations, it takes up post-structuralist theories of discourse, embodiment and affect to consider how these digital photographs became ‘sticky’ with memories of peer derision, ‘mortifying’ pupils and marking them as ‘other’ in ways that were intensified through later display to the class. Thus, rather than providing benign support for learning, the circulation of these images as part of feedback processes in this classroom context seems to have functioned as a powerful technology of individualization and normalization.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
British Journal of Sociology of EducationISSN
0142-5692Publisher
Taylor & FrancisExternal DOI
Issue
6Volume
33Page range
893-911Department affiliated with
- Education Publications
Notes
Online firstFull text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes