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Matthew Charles Ruscoe

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Areas of Interest
Social and Political Philosophy
European Philosophy
  • All publications (11)
  •  74
    Teaching, in Spite of Excellence: Recovering a Practice of Teaching-Led Research
    Studies in Philosophy and Education 37 (1): 15-29. 2017.
    Although, as a result of the introduction of the Teaching Excellence Framework, the principle of teaching excellence is receiving renewed attention in English higher education, the idea has been left largely undefined. The cynic might argue, in agreement with Bill Readings, that this lack of a precise definition is deliberate, since teaching excellence is not designed to observe teaching but to permit an integrated system of accounting. This article, however, develops a different line of critici…Read more
    Although, as a result of the introduction of the Teaching Excellence Framework, the principle of teaching excellence is receiving renewed attention in English higher education, the idea has been left largely undefined. The cynic might argue, in agreement with Bill Readings, that this lack of a precise definition is deliberate, since teaching excellence is not designed to observe teaching but to permit an integrated system of accounting. This article, however, develops a different line of criticism. Following Readings’s characterization of “excellence” as symptomatic of the “Americanization” of higher education, it traces the principle of teaching excellence in English educational discourse back to the influence of debates, led by Ernest Boyer in the US, concerning the teaching-research nexus. Contextualizing these debates in relation to ideas about the learning society influenced by theories of human capital and investment in national productivity, it takes issue with descriptions of recent policy that overemphasize the corporate structure of the university and its vision of the student as consumer at the expense of recognizing the continuation of the nation-state organization of the student as producer. Reconnecting this broader framework back to the teaching-research nexus, the article examines how this intersects with the dominant agenda of research-led teaching excellence, centred on the idea of the productivity of research, and outlines an alternative notion of teaching-led research, developed out of the work of Boyer and Walter Benjamin, within which teaching might continue, in spite of excellence.
    Philosophy of Education
  • Samuel Weber, Benjamin's-abilities
    Radical Philosophy 153 52. 2009.
    Walter Benjamin
  • Erdmut Wizisla, Walter Benjamin and Bertolt Brecht: The Story of a Friendship
    Radical Philosophy 161 60. 2010.
    20th Century German Philosophy
  •  14
    Philosophy for children
    Radical Philosophy 170 45. 2011.
    EthicsPhilosophy of Education
  •  39
    Celebrity come Communism
    Radical Philosophy 155 65-68. 2009.
    Socialism and Marxism
  • Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
    Radical Philosophy 166 41. 2011.
    Equality and CapabilitiesDemocracyPhilosophy of Education
  •  30
    Faust on film: Walter Benjamin and the cinematic ontology of Goethe's Faust 2
    Radical Philosophy 172 18-29. 2012.
    European Philosophy18th Century German Philosophy, Misc
  • REVIEWS-Walter Benjamin, Early Writings, 1910-1917
    Radical Philosophy 174 28. 2012.
    20th Century Continental Philosophy20th Century German PhilosophyWalter Benjamin
  • Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities (review)
    Radical Philosophy 166. 2011.
    Philosophy of EducationDemocracy
  • The Birth of Biopolitics: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1978–1979 (review)
    with Mark Kelly, Andrew Mcgettigan, and Douglas Spencer
    Radical Philosophy 153. 2009.
    Michel Foucault
  • Benjamin’s -abilities (review)
    Radical Philosophy 153. 2009.
    Continental Philosophy20th Century Continental PhilosophyWalter Benjamin
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