Much consternated
hand-wringing is devoted to the seeming disconnect between college education
and career paths. The mantra that college prepares people for careers is
repeated despite the easily available information that roughly half of college
graduates enter careers in their degree major field. This has raised questions
about the legitimacy of college education as career preparation, about the
legitimacy of certain disciplinary fields (i.e., those without “career paths,”
overwhelmingly in arts, humanities, and disciplines of critique like ethnic or
gender studies). If students go to college in order to start careers, goes the
“thought,” then higher education has failed if graduates don’t enter those
careers.
Oddly (revoltingly), the
empty rhetoric of administrators offers keener insight. Our wise administrators
can’t be bothered with linking degrees to career paths. They speak only of
“student success,” which, if it means anything at all, means only that a
student graduates. What such a student actually does during college is
irrelevant. The only important measures of degree programs are how many students
graduate, at what cost, and at what speed. The only additional measures of
universities are rankings by national media in one or more of the following
categories: time-to-degree, starting salaries of graduates, major sports teams.
Subjectively, graduates
may have acquired significant academic and intellectual abilities, begun to
master complex knowledge bases, or gone through profound personal and social
transformation. Objectively, systemically, this does not matter. Individually,
graduates may have developed saleable skills that allow them to command decent
salaries. Systemically, whether or not this happens, higher education has
succeeded.
In the understanding of
many critical commentators, a significant problem faces the university because
of the disconnection between individual students’ experiences, goals, and
outcomes, and the priorities and rhetoric of university administrators. They
have failed to comprehend higher education as a commodity and consumer object.
In Society of the Spectacle, Guy Debord explains that consumer culture
arises after the capitalist industry shifts from solving the problem of
sufficient production to meet demand, to the production of demand. Spectacle is
a quasi-ideological apparatus for the production of demand. The marketing of
brands and lifestyles are its basic mechanisms.
I don’t know when exactly
it happened, but some time between the end of the 1960s and the turn of the
millennium, this shift overtook higher education. Prior to this shift, higher
education produced technology and labor-power for capitalism. Since the shift,
it has mainly produced consumers of higher education. There are multiple tracks
of this consumption, more or less sumptuous depending on the tier of higher
education.
Higher education is
marketed and sold as brand and lifestyle in all tiers. Online for-profits,
regional public comprehensive universities, local community colleges, R1
research institutions—all have niche markets and demographic targets. The
consumer object they sell is sometimes called Education, sometimes Success, but
whatever it is, it is desirable.
University of Phoenix is,
by many measures of Education/Success, a failure. The university has poor
graduate rates, iffy job placement rates, and a poor academic reputation.
Nevertheless, again, our administrators wisely note that University of Phoenix
and its ilk are the real competitors of regional comprehensives and community
colleges.
To comprehend why this is
so, we have to remain impervious to the false charms of academic standards, and
instead take up the austere rigor of Jean Baudrillard’s analysis of consumer
objects and the hyperreal. First of all, we must recognize that consumer
objects are consumed not in their use as “real” things, but as hyperreal,
spectacular objects. It is not the noxious fumes emanating from the can that one
consumes, but Axe Body Spray—i.e., the hyperreal heterosexual copulation
between young men and young women. It is not learning, struggling, striving,
failing, thinking that one consumes, but Education. (Of course, this is not to
deny that copulation, etc., do happen, but to deny that copulation is
consumption. Copulation comes to an end; consumption is an endless circuit of
desire-consumption-desire/consumption-desire-consumption. I omit here further
elaboration of the circuits of consumption à la Volume II of Capital.)
In advertising, which
provides the most significant portion of brand benefit of any consumer object,
the barest link is maintained between Education/Success and other desirable
goods like careers or income (for legal reasons, no doubt). Like advertising
for perfumed body spray, beer, cars, or disposable cleaning wipes, there is
mention of no specific effort by the consumer, no actual use, no real qualities
of the product, and no demonstrable claims about the effects of the product.
University of Phoenix used to advertise with the slogan “I’m a Phoenix,” which
tells us that the graduate has been branded by the University. Like body
spray’s effect on relations between heteronormed young men and women, branding
by Phoenix is presented as having such an effect on relations between
Success-normed graduates and employers.
That is to say,
Education/Success begins and ends in an exchange relation among consumer
objects, which now includes in its orbit the branded graduates themselves, and
their employers. Students rely on that relation to acquire the means of further
consumption. Employers consume the branded graduates in much the same way that
one consumes beer. Universities parlay the relation into the circulation of
capital in the forms of donations and additional students.
It’s remarkable how
little apparent this is in my everyday work. I am confronted daily by the
university brand and by the high-concept expression of it by administrators.
But in classes, in talking with students or reading their papers or email
messages, I labor under the apprehension of them as real people with real
challenges to real learning. Because this real life goes on constantly, it’s
easy to fall into believing that the brand is unreal. Some people even take it
for an insult when they first hear that University Education is hyperreal, or
in Bill Readings’ phrase, “in ruins.” The hyperreal is a dimension of everyday
life that defies subjective understanding or mastery; it is the reality-effect
of ongoing relations of symbolic exchange according to circuits of capital
consumer production, in no one’s control. As such it is determinative of the
conditions of real production, and appears in the guise of the real, or at least
bears the same names. No wonder it is so difficult to tell whether what’s at
stake in our struggle is Education or education, Student Success or students’
success, the University or the university.
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