Abstract
In his 2004 article “Hannah Arendt and Jean Baudrillard: Pedagogy in
the Consumer Society,” Trevor Norris bemoans the degree to which contemporary
education’s focus can increasingly be described as primarily nurturing “consumers
in training.” He goes on to add that the consequences of such “mindless” consumerism is that it “erodes democratic life, reduces education to the reproduction of
private accumulation, prevents social resistance from expressing itself as anything
other than political apathy, and transforms all human relations into commercial
transactions of calculated exchange.” This, then, is the challenge of the age: to
articulate the sort of education that might prompt our youngsters to imagine a
genuine alternative to this consumer madness—a challenge that the authors of this
paper attempt to tackle.