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Could an actress (Lambeti), a composer (Karaindrou) and two secondary teachers have something in common? Vivi Delikari The research data In this paper we focus on the narration of two secondary teachers: a woman, teacher of Greek literature and a man, teacher of Mathematics. They both recognize analogies between the construction of their identity and that of two well known artists: one contemporary and active female composer (Karaindrou) and one – now dead - actress (Elli Lambeti). The narrations of the two teachers which are parts of the broader scripts of the interviews that lasted for roughly an hour and a half, were recorded in August of 2004; they constitute a part of research material of my doctoral thesis In my thesis I am concerned with the discourses employed by the secondary teachers, when they conceptualize the evaluation practices and choices constructing at the same time professional identities. Methodological and theoretical issues I apply to the political discourse theory as shaped by Laclau, Mouffe and Stavrakakis in order to do a kind of critical research aiming at the development of the awareness of the research subjects concerning the construction of professional identities, considering myself as one of the research subjects Political discourse analysis cannot be used with all sorts of theoretical contexts It is not just a method of analyzing data but a theoretical and methodological whole and the researchers must accept basic theoretical premises before they use the critical practice of discourse analysis (Phillips & Morgensen, 2002, 2-4). It articulates → philosophical (ontological and epistemological) premises about the role of language in the social construction of the world → theoretical models → methodological arguments about how to approach the research field → special techniques of analysis Basic Arguments While secondary teachers conceptualize and narrate the ways through which they evaluate pupils, they experience momentarily feelings of insecurity when they realize the arbitrary and contingent character of the evaluative practices and choices Because of these feelings, teachers articulate a bricolage of differentiated elements (pedagogical, personal memories, experiences, legislative guidance, perceptions of their role, rituals) in order to compensate for and wishing to “forget the [arbitrary] origins” (Laclau, 1997,99) of the institutionalization of these practices in use. I argue that teachers assume “selective affinities” between themselves and artistic figures as part of this bricolage (Bernstein,1991,119) Constructing “resemblances” to an actress The teacher of the Greek Literature constructs ‘resemblances’ to Lambeti and ‘differences’ with ‘other’ women teachers concerning teaching and evaluating. For example, she claims that: a) teaching is a charisma, just as well as the art of an actor as Lambeti b) she has not the “charisma” while two ‘other’ women teachers do have (only two in a decade of teaching experience, as she points out) c) Their ‘charisma’ is described in ambivalent and controversial terms: «is just like seeing the actors getting on stage and the stage accepting them, although they have not done anything». And she adds «I think what was really going on, was that the profession was turning into a horrible substitute of their personal lives. I mean, if I can speak perfectly open, that their personal life was dissolved, dissolved! They were getting lost in their personal lives». d) she used to envy such charismatic people like the two teachers (forgetting the ambivalence of their ‘charisma’) Gaps in the construction The teacher, despite having stated that she is not charismatic, identifies herself with charismatic Lambeti claiming that they both evaluate themselves before evaluating other people. Instead, the charismatic two women teachers cannot be identified with charismatic Lambeti, as they evaluated others (i.e. pupils) without evaluating first their ‘personal’ life The explanatory role of the charisma is refuted Thus, the ‘charismatic’ teaching of the two women teachers and the ‘threat’ that it could constitute for the narrator’ s professional identity is disdained in the name of their unreliable evaluative practices All this construction is paradigmatic about : a) the arbitrariness and the contingency of the articulated elements that take place in the conceptualization of the evaluation processes. b) the role of the articulated elements in the construction of ‘secure’ professional identity, when the gaps in the identification and the exclusions, which take place, are masked. The evaluation of Mathematics In his attempt to provide a coherent explanation of his way of evaluation, the teacher of mathematics points out that a teacher is certainly affected by a particular student in that whether he is going to give him (sic) a higher or a lower mark. It isn’t something floating in the air. I mean, one can’t control it. He gives a better mark to the student, he sympathizes more. He says that he sympathizes more those you can have the best communication with, and the communication in the duration of the lesson is a part of the subject that you teach. You sympathize more the one you can have a better communication with, through the subject, in my opinion. Plus another thing is, that some features of his (sic) character look like yours. Or look like yours when you were a student… The evaluation of Mathematics and the charisma of Eleni Karaindrou The teacher recognizes the character of ‘a student’ instinctively (i.e. his (sic) inclination to schooling) as well as factually (i.e. how sociable he (sic) is) and on this basis he shapes feelings concerning him that he expresses in the ‘marks’: I mean, all those things play a certain role so that you could shape your opinion about the student, thus you are sentimentally close to him– or not, thus his mark is affected. According to the teacher, students’ ability to communicate and good performance in mathematics are innate qualities, just as in the case of Eleni Karaindrou who became an exceptional composer without any musical education: In nature, probably…especially in mathematics in relation to other lessons this is more obvious. I don’t know why. Why does a child like, say, music? I heard Karaindrou now, say, on TV, one morning, being asked «was your family related to music in any way, or did you see…», «no», she says, «I grew up in a village». Well, they ask, «What music did you listen to? What musical experience did you have in the village? » «Well, she says, I listened to the rain on the roof, the rivulets, those things…». Games of identification The teacher conceptualizing his evaluative practices constructs Mathematics as a lesson close to the art of music He constructs ‘resemblances’ between some students (male) who have an innate inclination towards Mathematics and Karaindrou who has the innate ‘charisma’ of music composition The teacher argues that he is able to recognize the innate inclination of the students based on an instinct What is remaining obscure and unspeakable is : a) What characteristics concerning the professional identity does one who recognizes good performance of the students in terms of ‘charisma’ imagine? For example, how does the teacher relate his “instinct” with his studies on Mathematics? b) How does he evaluate the students that he considers as non-charismatic? Conclusions The charisma conceptualized as a self-evident characteristic of some artists, naturalized and objectified as an innate and natural property of a special ability, is used by the two teachers: a) to rationalize evaluative practices b) to obscure the origins of the institutionalization of these practices and c) to mask the incomplete identifications and the exclusions that they presuppose ‘People that do not matter’ Both teachers conceptualizing their evaluative practices, they imagine and discursively construct some people that do not matter, against whom and by virtue of which, teachers construct their identities: women teachers with a ‘dissolved’ personal life, students who do not have the charisma, the abjects, in the words of Butler, which designate those “unlivable” and “uninhabitable” zones of social life which are nevertheless densely populated by those who do not enjoy the status of the subject, but whose living under the sign of the “unlivable” is required to circumscribe the domain of the subject. This zone of uninhabitability will constitute the defining limit of the subjects’ domain; it will constitute that site of dreaded identification against which - and by virtue of which - the domain of the subject will circumscribe its own claim to autonomy and to life. In this sense, the subject is constituted through the force of exclusion and abjection, one which produces a constitutive ‘outside’ to the subject, an abjected outside, which is, after all, “inside” the subject as its own founding repudiation…(Butler, 1993,3).