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Access to Inequality: Reconsidering Class, Knowledge, and Capital in Higher Education

Autor Amy E. Stich
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 mai 2014
Set against the backdrop of democratization, increased opportunity, and access, income-based gaps in college entry, persistence, and graduation continue to grow, underlining a deep contradiction within American higher education. In other words, despite the well-intended, now mature process of democratization, the postsecondary system is still charged with high levels of inequality. In the interest of uncovering the mechanisms through which democratization, as currently conceived, preserves and perpetuates inequality within the system of higher education, this bookreconsiders the role of social class in the production and dissemination of knowledge, the valuation of cultural capital, and the reproduction of social inequalities. Drawing upon the author's year-long qualitative research study within one "democratized" institution of higher education and its associated art museum, Access to Inequality explores the vestiges of an exclusionary history within higher education and the art world-two related contexts that have arguably failed to adequately respond to the public's call to democratize.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780739197721
ISBN-10: 073919772X
Pagini: 135
Ilustrații: 1 BW Illustration
Dimensiuni: 155 x 229 x 11 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Chapter 1: The Democratization of American Higher Education
Chapter 2: Class, Knowledge, and Capital in Interconnected Context
Chapter 3: Reputational Affects: Inside a Working Class College
Chapter 4: Classifying Knowledge by Hand, by Head
Chapter 5: Elite Knowledge within a Non-Elite Space: Language, Literacy and "Intertextual Habituality"
Chapter 6: Re-conceiving Democratization
Appendix: A Note on Methods

Recenzii

Stich has a well-defined remit that assists in her analysis of some contemporary practices in parts of North American higher education: she is also a very talented writer. Her title appears a deliberately provocative response to the now-familiar question 'access to what'? The answer she sets out is a chilling one for liberal-minded educators (amongst whom I often include myself) but perhaps not so surprising for those who try to take a strongly reflexive sociological view of higher education in their research (amongst whom I also include myself). . . .What is even more impressive is her capacity to oscillate back and forth between system-level features and the most 'micro' of everyday social processes. . . .I would argue that Access to Inequality already provides powerful justification for more radical action in terms of admissions, perhaps drawing lessons from affirmative action policies.
Access to Inequality is a passionate and lyrical account of the workings of class and privilege in higher education. Beautifully written, it constitutes both a carefully considered, reflexive ethnography of access to elite knowledge and a powerful call for real democratization of our universities.
Amy Stich's Access to Inequality: Reconsidering Class, Knowledge, and Capital in Higher Education is the most original and important book on knowledge and power I have read in recent years. Here, Stich demonstrates the ways colleges-in particular, less elite comprehensive schools-are using art programs and museums to 'open up' privileged knowledge to broader communities. Stich puts us at the center of the resulting tensions and complexities, illuminating a discussion of cultural capital with stunning and nuanced ethnographic detail. This is a masterful intervention.