At the same time, we’ve seen that there is a more subtle way in which the very struc-
ture of Socratic
questioning is reflexive, using pragmatic structure in the classroom to
impart a new, heavily indexical orientation to the reading of conflict stories. Here we might
talk of a slightly different dynamic, in which the classroom discourse’s indexical structure
teaches through a reflexive mirroring (as opposed, for example, to teaching through a more
semantico-referential “explanation” of what it seeks to convey). At this more local level,
then,
we might talk of a kind of
iconic indexical
structure to classroom discourse, just in
the sense that it reorients students through a mirroring indexical calibration of classroom
discourse to the metapragmatics of a new textual ideology. Arguably, then, there is a double
indexical mirroring of legal-discursive structures occurring through Socratic method teach-
ing. This would only further reinforce a sense of fit between the
classic pedagogy and what
it seeks to impart, regardless of its actual efficacy.
39. There is, however, an interesting commonality between Collins’s lowest status
group and the law school class analyzed in this section; in both, there is arguably a break
with the “liberal” notion that semantic meaning is what a text is all about. Instead, the
meaning of texts lies in the pragmatic orientation that teachers impart through regiment-
ing classroom speech. At the same time, there is an obvious difference between highest
and lowest status classrooms. The low-ability students are taught to submit to the text—
to pronounce it and nothing else—whereas the law student’s pragmatic
discipline is aimed
at mastery and manipulation. In exploring contrasts among such differing social settings
and approaches to text, we can begin to see the relation between social power and the regi-
mentation of text, enacted in the critical process of socialization to text through the de-
and recentering of written texts in classroom speech. We can also see that it would be a
mistake to read transparently from discourse form to social function.
40. Although the parallel is striking, I do not mean to imply here any transparent
continuity between the discourse style of the classroom and
the discourses used in legal
practice of various kinds. Rather, the classroom discourse is a semiotic disciplining to a
new form of reading and discursively organizing written texts, and this form of reading
will of course be multiply recontextualized in the various speech settings of legal practice.
41. See Chapter 6. In
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