Somewhere along the way I learned "utopia" was a bad word, along with other fru-fru-isms like "holistic" and "hope". I think that came from the grating and grinding realities of daily youth work, which I partook in for more than 10 years. Today I have the privilage of distance and opportunity, which I use for reflection sometimes.
Recently in my reflections I came across a memory of Paulo Freire writing about the radical neccesity of envisioning utopia. The hard work many of us do everyday can rob us of opportunities to dream about the ideals we seek to realize through our work. If we are truly committed to transforming the roles of young people throughout society, each of us should create the time and space we need to really imagine what it is we are striving for.
Take a moment soon, right now if you can. What are your goals for youth involvement/engagement/voice/empowerment? Where do you want youth to go? What do you want to see adults do? How do you want to see democracy behave?
There are a lot of urgent needs in our collective and individual works. Those needs should not be ignored or dismissed. However, I challenge that we should take a moment to dream of the world we should live in. And then we should dream out loud, take action, and make the world into the place we want it to be. But this work begins with a dream. What's yours?
-- This is Adam Fletcher's blog originally posted at http://www.YoungerWorld.org. For more see http://www.bicyclingfish.com
Friday, June 05, 2009
Thursday, June 04, 2009
Radical at it's Core?
I had a convo yesterday with a colleague who suggested that any youth voice is inherently radical. I replied that as an identity-based perspective, youth voice can be easily manipulated and construed to be reaffirming of mainstream belief, or tokenized and patronized into an obscure and irrelevant ideal. I believe these outcomes are anti-radical, and largely based in the cynical notion that youth voice is just another way to report that we've "been there and done that", another checkbox on a form. I don't believe youth voice is inherently radical. Instead, it's another tool in the toolbox of democracy. Democracy is only radical when it's most severely practiced. That severe practice has been conceptualized by theorists like Zyglut and Giroux as "radical democracy."
In my understanding of this ideal, radical democracy is the fully actualized potential of democracy. Rather than rely on simplistic participation it demands the active engagement of every citizens' critical thinking, cultural wisdom and utopian vision in order to collectively craft the future.
This is where youth voice takes it's most authentic form, and unfortunately it's generally the most threatening. Consequently it's also labeled "radical" and thus made inaccessible to both youth and adults. The reason for this is that radical democracy calls all children and youth to action throughout society as critical agents of our collective goals in cultural, educational, scientific, ethical and social aspects.
Radical democracy can give us a useful lens through which to re-envision the roles of youth in society, which is my ultimate goal. We should all consider it as a way to move our efforts forward.
-- This is Adam Fletcher's blog originally posted at http://www.YoungerWorld.org. For more see http://www.bicyclingfish.com
In my understanding of this ideal, radical democracy is the fully actualized potential of democracy. Rather than rely on simplistic participation it demands the active engagement of every citizens' critical thinking, cultural wisdom and utopian vision in order to collectively craft the future.
This is where youth voice takes it's most authentic form, and unfortunately it's generally the most threatening. Consequently it's also labeled "radical" and thus made inaccessible to both youth and adults. The reason for this is that radical democracy calls all children and youth to action throughout society as critical agents of our collective goals in cultural, educational, scientific, ethical and social aspects.
Radical democracy can give us a useful lens through which to re-envision the roles of youth in society, which is my ultimate goal. We should all consider it as a way to move our efforts forward.
-- This is Adam Fletcher's blog originally posted at http://www.YoungerWorld.org. For more see http://www.bicyclingfish.com
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