{"id":1667,"date":"2013-02-07T21:49:10","date_gmt":"2013-02-07T21:49:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/infed.org\/mobi\/?p=1667"},"modified":"2025-08-21T15:17:36","modified_gmt":"2025-08-21T14:17:36","slug":"raymond-williams-and-education-a-slow-reach-again-for-control","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/welcome\/raymond-williams-and-education-a-slow-reach-again-for-control\/","title":{"rendered":"Raymond Williams and education &#8211; a slow reach again for control"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright wp-image-30768\" src=\"https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/08\/raymond-williams-gwydionm-pd-wikimedia-commons.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"382\" height=\"280\" srcset=\"https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/08\/raymond-williams-gwydionm-pd-wikimedia-commons.jpg 437w, https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/08\/raymond-williams-gwydionm-pd-wikimedia-commons-300x220.jpg 300w, https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/08\/raymond-williams-gwydionm-pd-wikimedia-commons-150x110.jpg 150w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 382px) 100vw, 382px\" \/>Raymond Williams and education &#8211; a slow reach again for control. Raymond Williams was a literary critic, cultural historian, cultural and political theorist, novelist, dramatist, and the virtual inventor of the interdisciplinary field known as &#8216;cultural studies&#8217;. Josh Cole explores his little-appreciated contribution as an educational thinker.<\/h2>\n<p><!--StyleSheet Link--><strong>Contents<\/strong>: <a href=\"#intro\">introduction<\/a> \u00b7 <a href=\"#early_encounters\">early encounters with community and schooling<\/a> \u00b7 <a href=\"#adult_education\">raymond williams, adult education and lifelong learning<\/a> \u00b7 <a href=\"#public_pedagogy\">the virtues and dangers of public pedagogy<\/a> \u00b7 <a href=\"#culture\">culture as a medium for political transformation<\/a> \u00b7 <a href=\"#conclusion\">conclusion &#8211; raymond williams and education<\/a> \u00b7 <a href=\"#biblio\">references<\/a> \u00b7 <a href=\"#writer\">about the writer<\/a> \u00b7 <a href=\"#cite\">how to cite this piece<\/a><!--StyleSheet Link--><\/p>\n<p><strong><a name=\"intro\"><\/a> Raymond Henry Williams<\/strong> (1921-1988) wrote little directly related to education during his long career, and has rarely been thought of as an educational thinker. Despite this, education courses through his work, and if one looks carefully, much can be found within it to enrich pedagogical thought and practice.<\/p>\n<p>In what follows, I will describe Williams\u2019 cultural roots and early educational experiences, his thoughts on adult education and lifelong learning, his concern with informal education and public pedagogy, and his general thinking about the transformative power of culture, perhaps his greatest contribution to pedagogy in the widest sense.<\/p>\n<h4><a name=\"early_encounters\"><\/a>Early encounters with community and schooling<\/h4>\n<p>Raymond Williams was born in 1921 in Pandy, Wales to a working class, politically-left-leaning family (his father, a railway worker, was also the secretary of the local Branch Labour Party in the 1920s) (see Smith 2008). He was an exceptional student, attending Llanfihangel elementary school before winning a prestigious scholarship to King Henry VIII Grammar School in Abergavenny in 1932. The notion of education and intellectualism were central to Williams\u2019 Welsh village community. Unlike other working-class students he later met in university, he was always encouraged in his intellectual pursuits. As he later explained, he attributed this to Wales\u2019 unique cultural climate:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>there was absolutely no sense in which education was felt as something curious in the community\u2026There was absolutely nothing wrong with being bright, winning a scholarship or writing a book\u2026Historically, Welsh intellectuals have come in very much larger numbers from poor families than have English intellectuals, so the movement [into intellectual life] is not regarded as abnormal or eccentric\u2026The typical Welsh intellectual is\u2014as we say\u2014only one generation away from shirt sleeves. (Williams 1979: 29)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>That said, as child in Wales, Raymond Williams learned more than just an appreciation for the life of the mind. He also began to see education and politics as deeply intertwined, a lesson that marked him deeply. In the Wales of Williams\u2019 boyhood, formal schooling served as a means of supplanting local cultures with the official culture of the British Empire. Children in Pandy were punished for speaking Welsh in schools, and were taught, above all else, about the glories of \u2018English Civilization.\u2019 As he was finishing at King Henry VIII, Raymond Williams\u2019 father and his headmaster colluded to send him to Cambridge University without his consultation. He later recognized that this educational official played a small but important role in the colonizing process, by identifying talented local children and whisking them away to elite English universities, thus neutralizing their potential anti-colonialist tendencies. (Williams 1979: 37)<\/p>\n<p>Raymond Williams began reading the \u2018English Tripos\u2019 (modern languages, history, and classics) at Cambridge in 1941, before being called to service during World War II. After serving as a wireless operator and tank operator, he returned to Cambridge in 1946 to finish his studies. Immediately after, he was appointed as a Staff Tutor in the Oxford University Tutorial Classes Committee\u2014also known as the Extra-Mural Delegacy and Workers Education Association (WEA).<\/p>\n<h4><a name=\"adult_education\"><\/a>Raymond Williams, adult education and lifelong learning<\/h4>\n<p>As an adult educator, Raymond Williams began to reconcile the schism between the community-based <a href=\"http:\/\/www.infed.org\/i-intro.htm\">informal education<\/a> he received in Pandy, and the \u2018official,\u2019 elite education bestowed upon him through English schooling and higher education. He did so by attempting to use Oxford\u2019s adult education programme to actualize a process of lifelong learning conducive to a radical expansion of community and democracy. Williams insisted that \u2018education was ordinary,\u2019 and was a means through which people of all ages could both immerse themselves in a common culture, and refine and sharpen that culture against their own individual experiences. (Morgan 2002: 253) Adult education offered a unique means of deconstructing the social hierarchies created by other forms of education, rather than reinforcing those hierarchies in the name of private or commercial interests. In <a href=\"http:\/\/www.infed.org\/lifelonglearning\/b-adedgn.htm\">adult education<\/a>, people could cultivate critical skills by interacting with others whom they might not normally encounter (a factory labourer and a physician could engage in philosophical discourse, for instance) and thus create a concrete, working model for a future democratic society (Williams 1993: 221; 219) Education as a mere means of post-war material advancement&#8211;a means of creating a \u201cnewly mobile and varied elite\u201d&#8211;was anathema to Williams\u2019 conception of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.infed.org\/lifelonglearning\/b-life.htm\">lifelong learning<\/a>. (Williams 1993: 223)<\/p>\n<p>For Raymond Williams, adult education as a means of expanding democracy meant <i>all<\/i> involved would be educated\u2014including the educators. Anticipating <a href=\"http:\/\/www.infed.org\/thinkers\/et-freir.htm\">Paulo Freire\u2019s<\/a> great work <i>Pedagogy of the Oppressed<\/i> (published in 1968), Williams argued in the early 1960s that the educational process cuts both ways. The adult instructor has much to learn about herself and her discipline from her students. Ideally, through adult education, instructors and students would \u2018meet as equals\u2019 in the classroom, and share fully in the process of democratic learning. (This is not to suggest that Raymond Williams assumed that students automatically knew more about a teaching subject than their instructors\u2014his was not an uncritical version of \u2018student-centred learning\u2019&#8211;rather, he simply took it as given that the instructor is not beyond reproach: the educator \u201cmay not know the gaps between academic teaching and actual experience among many people; he may not know when, in the pressure of experience, a new discipline has to be created.\u201d Interaction with adult students could give educators that experience) (Williams 1993: 225)<\/p>\n<p>One experiment in democratic learning made possible through adult education involved using technology to transcend the physical confines of the classroom. For Raymond Williams, adult education offered a unique opportunity to marry new communications media and pedagogy, expanding the democratic reach of educational practice. As he wrote in 1959:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>There is no necessary opposition between (education) through the small group and the use of such new media as broadcasting and television. We all live at different levels of community, and a healthy culture needs a corresponding scale and variety of institutions. Broadcasting has helped adult education both directly and indirectly. Television, at worst, has not harmed it. (Williams 1993: 220)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h4><a name=\"public_pedagogy\"><\/a>The virtues and dangers of public pedagogy<\/h4>\n<p>Raymond Williams was an important (if largely unrecognized) theorist and proponent of \u2018public pedagogy.\u2019 Public pedagogy is an approach to education that (in the words of the American educational historian, Lawrence Cremin) \u201cprojects us beyond the schools to a host of other institutions that educate: families, churches, libraries, museums, publishers, benevolent societies, youth groups, agricultural fairs, radio networks, military organizations, and research institutes.\u201d (Cremin 1970: xi; see also Gramsci 1995: 249; Giroux 2006: 70) This expansive notion of education, in which Williams saw great democratic potential, ran counter to education as traditionally conceived from the nineteenth-century forward; that is, as either the perpetuation of elite culture, or as a means of vocational training. Both reproduced social inequalities, and did so partially through their confinement to the controlled environment of the school-house. In addition to this, both were fatally nostalgic, failing to take contemporary realities into account. Raymond Williams saw modern people as swimming in a veritable sea of new information and modes of communication\u2014all of which educate. As he wrote in 1953, in defence of the study of film as an adult educational subject:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>[F]or conservatives and reformers alike [film] is shorthand for depravity and cultural decay. Many fear that if education touches it, the taint will be indelible. It is a pretty fear; but if adult education cannot handle and access an institution which weekly serves the leisure of twenty-five million British adults, and which deals well or badly, but at least with great emotive power, with the values of man and society, then adult education deserves to fade. (Williams, 1993: 186)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Though he saw modern media such as film as intrinsically educational, this alone did not guarantee it democratic status. The new information environment was (and is) all too often inordinately influenced by interests that care little for education or democracy. (McGuigan 1993: 168) A paradigmatic example of Raymond Williams\u2019 approach to new media as public pedagogy, and the dangers that unequal access to the means of information production hold for public pedagogy, can be seen in his analysis of the commercialization of the printing press. The press, from its advent in the sixteenth-century, was a mixture of public and private, commercial and non-commercial elements. It was educative from the start, spurring on \u201cthe formation of opinion, the training of manners, the dissemination of ideas.\u201d (Williams 1961: 175) That said, ratio of the commercial and non-commercial, and thus the educative and the non-educative, was seriously upset in the 1890s due to the introduction of mass advertising. Through advertising, the share of potentially liberating information in newspapers was dwarfed by that that of commercial \u2018persuasion.\u2019 As a result, the press became a medium dominated by a \u201cselection of facts and opinions\u201d related primarily to capitalist expansion. The promise of an informed, critically engaged populace suffered as a result. (Williams 1993: 123)<\/p>\n<p>Characteristically for Raymond Williams, all is never lost, and the seeds of renewal are never far from the surface. Mass media, though subject to anti-educational interests, can still be rescued for the purposes of democracy. For instance, centralized forms of information such as the press&#8211;which are likely to be overtaken by singular interests&#8211;could usefully be combined with, and offset by, regionally-based means of public education, such as \u201ctheatres, orchestras, county societies, the great voluntary organizations, local authorities, and the minority national cultural organizations.\u201d (Williams 1993: 220) Similarly, a medium like television could be utilized for the public interest (as it was in the heyday of the Open University, a project for which Williams was an early, if not uncritical champion). If the entire informational environment were directed towards education and by extension democracy, and if the \u201cextreme hostility which has been all too common in education towards the general communications services\u201d could be overcome, Raymond Williams believed that the political dividends would be enormous, and what we now conceive as \u2018education\u2019 could be superseded by something altogether more \u2018public\u2019 and effective (Williams 1993: 230)<\/p>\n<h4><a name=\"culture\"><\/a>Culture as a medium for political transformation<\/h4>\n<p>On the most basic level, perhaps Raymond Williams\u2019 most important lesson for educators is the deep and continuous emphasis he placed upon culture as both a constitutive element of society, and as a potential means for social transformation. Unlike many writers and thinkers on culture, who seal off it from the rest of society, Raymond Williams refused to divorce culture from other concerns. For him, culture cannot be understood in isolation from the social ground from which it springs, or from the reciprocal effects it has upon the social environment. He stated this still sadly unorthodox position as early as 1947 in a journal he edited entitled <i> Politics and Letters<\/i>:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>If a critic of literature is genuinely interested in the contemporary and traditional work which he criticizes, then he cannot fail to be concerned about much more than literature itself. He is obliged to enquire particularly into what modern literature reflects of contemporary social experience and into the way in which social life influences the subject, form, and language of literature. But beyond these researches, he must accept the responsibility for whatever it is that literature <i>represents<\/i> in society. (Williams 1993: 34)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>This marriage of culture and politics did not ingratiate Raymond Williams to England\u2019s academic elite. As Terry Eagleton points out, Williams politicized culture just enough to alienate him from his peers, and to have his version of culture \u201cthrown back in his face by the cultivated.\u201d (Eagleton 1989: 5)<\/p>\n<p>As Raymond Williams moved further to the left in the 1970s, his notions of culture moved with him\u2014and so did the controversy he generated. Unlike many leftists of the time, Williams refused to treat culture as a second-order political concern. The simplified version of Marxism then fashionable all too often subordinated culture to a mere reflection (or \u2018superstructure\u2019) of the economic mode of production (or \u2018base\u2019) practiced in a given period. Drawing on the work of the Italian cultural and political theorist Antonio Gramsci, Williams rejected this \u2018economistic\u2019 view of society. Instead, he advanced a position which had culture, economics, and politics in deep and shifting interaction with one another. A social formation at a given historical moment was for Williams a \u201ccomplex interlocking of political, social, and cultural forces.\u201d (Williams 1977: 108) In such a situation, culture is, if anything, the key constituent. Culture\u2014particularly in institutional forms such as schooling and higher education\u2014is crucial to rendering economic and political arrangements \u2018natural,\u2019 and thus \u2018inevitable\u2019 and \u2018unchangeable.\u2019 Culture \u2018internalizes\u2019 political arraignments, and makes them a vital part of public and private experience. (Williams 1977: 110) Once naturalized through culture, such an arrangement gains immeasurably in influence.<\/p>\n<p>But for Raymond Williams, if culture is a key factor in modern political arrangements, it also contains their potential undoing. Within any cultural and political formation, nodes of resistance are ever-present. The dominant formation always contains remnants of the cultural past (or, the \u2018residual\u2019), and generates new cultural forces (the \u2018emergent\u2019) which can be turned against an existing cultural and political order. Human agency always shadows domination. As he emphatically stated in 1977\u2019s <i>Marxism and Literature<\/i>: \u201cno mode of production and therefore no dominant social order and therefore no dominant culture ever in reality includes or exhausts all human practice, human energy, and human intention.\u201d (Williams 1977: 125) Thus, within the culture that oppresses, lies the \u2018imminent critique\u2019 that can be used to overthrow oppression in the name of a deeper and more total form of democracy. Educators play an obvious and essential role in such a project.<\/p>\n<h4><a name=\"conclusion\"><\/a>Conclusion: Raymond Williams and education<\/h4>\n<p>As mentioned in the beginning of this piece, Raymond Williams\u2019 influence upon educators and pedagogical theorists has been indirect, if not slight. Considering that in education, more than in most activities, culture and politics come together in a radically concrete fashion, and that education is, by its very nature, a site in which \u2018human practice, human energy, and human intention\u2019 can flourish or be stifled, Williams\u2019 absence from pedagogical debate is genuinely unfortunate. But as more than one cultural worker has discovered, Williams has a way of making his presence known eventually. Stuart Hall has written as much: \u201cI have often had the uncanny experience of beginning a line of thought or inquiry, only to find that, apparently coincidentally, he had not only been travelling much the same road but had given the issues a clearer, more forceful and clarifying formulation.\u201d (Hall 1989: 55) Educators would benefit immeasurably by acquainting themselves with his rich and endlessly rewarding work, and by doing so sooner rather than later.<\/p>\n<h3><a name=\"biblio\"><\/a>References<\/h3>\n<p>Cremin, Lawrence A. (1970) <i>American Education: The Colonial Experience, 1607-1783.<\/i> New York: Harper.<\/p>\n<p>Eagleton, Terry (1989) \u201cIntroduction,\u201d in Terry Eagleton (ed.) <i>Raymond Williams: Critical Perspectives.<\/i> Boston: Northeastern University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Eldridge, Elizabeth and Eldridge, John (1994) <i>Raymond Williams: Making Connections.<\/i> London and New York: Routledge.<\/p>\n<p>Giroux, Henry (2006) <i>The Giroux Reader <\/i>edited by Christopher G. Robbins. Boulder: Paradigm Publishers.<\/p>\n<p>Hall. Stuart \u201cPolitics and Letters,\u201d in Terry Eagleton (ed.) <i>Raymond Williams: Critical Perspectives.<\/i> Boston: Northeastern University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Gramsci, Antonio. (1995) <i>Further Selections from the Prison Notebooks. <\/i> Translated and selected by Derek Boothman. London: Lawrence &amp; Wishart.<\/p>\n<p>McGuigan, J. (1993) \u201cReaching for Control: Raymond Williams on Mass Communication and Popular Culture,\u201d in W. John Morgan and Peter Preston (eds.) <i>Raymond Williams: Politics, Education, Letters.<\/i> New York: St. Martin\u2019s Press.<\/p>\n<p>Morgan, W. J. (2002) \u201cAntonio Gramsci and Raymond Williams: Workers, Intellectuals, and Adult Education,\u201d in Carmel Borg, Joseph Buttigieg, and Peter Mayo (eds.) <i>Gramsci and Education.<\/i> Lanham: Rowman &amp; Littlefield.<\/p>\n<p>Smith, D. (2008) <i>Raymond Williams. A warriors tale.<\/i> Ceredigion: Parthian Books.<\/p>\n<p>Turner, Graeme (1992) <i>British Cultural Studies: An Introduction.<\/i> London and New York: Routledge.<\/p>\n<p>Williams, Raymond (1961) <i>The Long Revolution.<\/i> London: Chatto &amp; Windus.<\/p>\n<p>Williams, Raymond (1977) <i>Marxism and Literature.<\/i> Oxford: Oxford University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Williams, Raymond (1979) <i>Politics and Letters: Interviews with the New Left Review<\/i>. London: Verso.<\/p>\n<p>Williams, Raymond (1983) <i>Culture &amp; Society: 1790-1950.<\/i> New York: Columbia University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Williams, Raymond (1993), <i>Border Country: Raymond Williams in Adult Education <\/i> edited by John McIlroy &amp; Sallie Westwood. Leicester: National Institute of Adult Continuing Education.<\/p>\n<p><b><a name=\"writer\"><\/a>Josh Cole<\/b> is a PhD Candidate in the department of history at Queen\u2019s University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. He received an Honours BA in history from Huron University College (at UWO) in 2006, and an MA in history from Queen&#8217;s in 2007. He is interested in cultural, intellectual, and political history, with a particular focus on the history of education in Northern North America. His dissertation is entitled <i>Culture and Anarchy in Ontario: The Right, the Left, and the Politics of Educational Change, 1945-1975<\/i>. It is an exploration of the common ground shared by politically right and left-wing critics regarding post-war Ontarian progressive educational policy.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Acknowledgement<\/strong>: Picture of Raymond Williams at Saffron Walden by GwydionM. Released into the public domain and sourced from Wikimedia Commons.<\/p>\n<p><strong><a name=\"cite\"><\/a>How to cite this piece<\/strong>: Cole, Josh (2008). &#8216;Raymond Williams and education &#8211; a slow reach again for control&#8217;, <em>The encyclopedia of pedagogy and informal education<\/em>. [<a title=\"Raymond Williams and education \u2013 a slow reach again for control\" href=\"https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/raymond-williams-and-education-a-slow-reach-again-for-control\/\">https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/raymond-williams-and-education-a-slow-reach-again-for-control\/<\/a>. Retrieved: <span style=\"color: #888888;\">insert date<\/span>]<\/p>\n<p>\u00a9 Josh Cole 2008<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Raymond Williams and education &#8211; a slow reach again for control. Raymond Williams was a literary critic, cultural historian, cultural and political theorist, novelist, dramatist, and the virtual inventor of the interdisciplinary field known as &#8216;cultural studies&#8217;. Josh Cole explores his little-appreciated contribution as an educational thinker. Contents: introduction \u00b7 early encounters with community and &#8230; <a title=\"Raymond Williams and education &#8211; a slow reach again for control\" class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/welcome\/raymond-williams-and-education-a-slow-reach-again-for-control\/\" aria-label=\"Read more about Raymond Williams and education &#8211; a slow reach again for control\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":30770,"parent":0,"menu_order":418,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_lmt_disableupdate":"no","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":"","_wp_rev_ctl_limit":""},"class_list":["post-1667","page","type-page","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Raymond Williams and education - a slow reach again for control - infed.org<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/infed.org\/dir\/welcome\/raymond-williams-and-education-a-slow-reach-again-for-control\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_GB\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Raymond Williams and education - a slow reach again for control - infed.org\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Raymond Williams and education &#8211; a slow reach again for control. Raymond Williams was a literary critic, cultural historian, cultural and political theorist, novelist, dramatist, and the virtual inventor of the interdisciplinary field known as &#8216;cultural studies&#8217;. Josh Cole explores his little-appreciated contribution as an educational thinker. Contents: introduction \u00b7 early encounters with community and ... 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Raymond Williams was a literary critic, cultural historian, cultural and political theorist, novelist, dramatist, and the virtual inventor of the interdisciplinary field known as &#8216;cultural studies&#8217;. Josh Cole explores his little-appreciated contribution as an educational thinker. Contents: introduction \u00b7 early encounters with community and ... 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