Working in Class: Recognizing How Social Class Shapes Our Academic Work
Autor Allison L. Hurst, Sandi Kawecka Nengaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 ian 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781475822533
ISBN-10: 1475822537
Pagini: 220
Dimensiuni: 155 x 227 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1475822537
Pagini: 220
Dimensiuni: 155 x 227 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Allison L. Hurst and Sandi K. Nenga
Part One: Research
Chapter 1: Class as a Force of Habit: The Social World Embodied in Scholarship
Sean McCloud
Chapter 2: Controlling for Class - or the Persistence of Classism in Psychology
Irene López and Olivia Legan
Chapter 3: Class, Academia, and Ontologies of Global Selfhood
Sara Appel
Chapter 4: Survival Strategies for Working-Class Women as Junior Faculty Members
Lynn Arner
Part Two: Teaching
Chapter 5: Boundary Crossing: Social Class and Race in the Classroom
Andrea Lewis
Chapter 6: Lessons Learned: How I Unintentionally Reproduce Class InequalityJessi Streib
Chapter 7: Making Class Salient in the Sociology Classroom
Melissa Quintela
Chapter 8: Witnessing Social Class in the Academy
Dwight Lang
Chapter 9: The Classroom Crucible:
Michael Svec and P.L. Thomas
Part Three: Work in the Academy
Chapter 10: Working-Class, Teaching Class and Working Class in the Academy
Krista Soria
Chapter 11: "We're All Middle Class Here": Privilege and the Denial of Class Inequality in the Canadian Professoriate
Tim Haney
Chapter 12: Narrating the Job Crisis: Self-Development or Collective Action?
Gretchen Braun
Chapter 13: Capitalizing Class: An Examination of Socioeconomic Diversity on the Contemporary Campus
Deborah M. Warnock
References
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Index
Introduction
Allison L. Hurst and Sandi K. Nenga
Part One: Research
Chapter 1: Class as a Force of Habit: The Social World Embodied in Scholarship
Sean McCloud
Chapter 2: Controlling for Class - or the Persistence of Classism in Psychology
Irene López and Olivia Legan
Chapter 3: Class, Academia, and Ontologies of Global Selfhood
Sara Appel
Chapter 4: Survival Strategies for Working-Class Women as Junior Faculty Members
Lynn Arner
Part Two: Teaching
Chapter 5: Boundary Crossing: Social Class and Race in the Classroom
Andrea Lewis
Chapter 6: Lessons Learned: How I Unintentionally Reproduce Class InequalityJessi Streib
Chapter 7: Making Class Salient in the Sociology Classroom
Melissa Quintela
Chapter 8: Witnessing Social Class in the Academy
Dwight Lang
Chapter 9: The Classroom Crucible:
Michael Svec and P.L. Thomas
Part Three: Work in the Academy
Chapter 10: Working-Class, Teaching Class and Working Class in the Academy
Krista Soria
Chapter 11: "We're All Middle Class Here": Privilege and the Denial of Class Inequality in the Canadian Professoriate
Tim Haney
Chapter 12: Narrating the Job Crisis: Self-Development or Collective Action?
Gretchen Braun
Chapter 13: Capitalizing Class: An Examination of Socioeconomic Diversity on the Contemporary Campus
Deborah M. Warnock
References
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Index
Recenzii
Students from working-class families struggle to succeed in universities run by individuals from more privileged backgrounds. Universities expand course offerings while reducing tenure track faculty positions, creating an underclass of highly educated, poorly paid adjunct instructors. Professors from working-class origins describe daunting barriers to career advancement, role rewards, and psychological well-being in the academy. And yet many faculty members and administrators minimize the significance of class in North American universities. This well-crafted volume offers fresh insights into the nature and consequences of socioeconomic class in higher education. Contributors draw on the work of sociologists C. W. Mills and Pierre Bourdieu to explore why class matters, examining the psychological and structural forces that have produced current conditions. The authors offer poignant narratives of their life experiences in the academy, describe research findings, and offer insightful syntheses of classic and more recent literature on how class dynamics affect teaching, research, and faculty service. The book includes a comprehensive, well-chosen, and timely reference list. It is essential reading for all who care about the future of higher education as a vehicle for upward mobility, including faculty members, graduate students, administrators, and educational policy makers.
Summing Up: Essential. All readership levels.
While social class is a prominent topic across disciplines, academics rarely turn the lens on themselves to consider how class operates in their own professional practice. Hurst and Nenga's edited volume Working in Class offers a much needed corrective. Drawing on personal experiences and research from an interdisciplinary perspective, these authors engage in 'me-search' of the highest caliber. They offer critical commentary on how social class is alive - but not always alive and well - on their campuses and in their classrooms. Ultimately, the collective message is an empowering one, with recommendations for institutional change and, barring that, transformation of our classrooms into more democratic and class-aware spaces.
Working in Class combines theoretical analyses of class effects and personal stories of fifteen academics of varying original class locations. As a collection, it is an invaluable guide to a multitude of key issues, such as how to survive in academia as a woman from the working class, and how best to teach low-income students of color. The book's many informed voices and its structural clarity make it an important new look at the academy.
This anthology from a variety of disciplines and social locations across academia is a treasure trove of insight, information and practical advice for those four million of us who earn our livings in academe. But more than that it is a window into the dynamics of how higher education in the U.S. produces and reproduces the professional middle class and its culture. Its special vantage point is that the authors combine their personal experiences of social class with the rigors of their particular disciplines to reveal the unacknowledged class-cultural conflicts and outright classism that is routinely involved in "going to college." For undergraduates it is the ideal text for bringing social class to the diversity discussion that today so richly informs many curricula. It's not just about recognizing and overcoming classism, but as many of these authors demonstrate, there is great potential for transformative learning in wading into the very different experiences and values both students and faculty have depending on their zip codes of origin. The volume as a whole argues that these differences could easily become assets rather than liabilities if honest light is shed on them. Working in Class shines that light brilliantly.
Summing Up: Essential. All readership levels.
While social class is a prominent topic across disciplines, academics rarely turn the lens on themselves to consider how class operates in their own professional practice. Hurst and Nenga's edited volume Working in Class offers a much needed corrective. Drawing on personal experiences and research from an interdisciplinary perspective, these authors engage in 'me-search' of the highest caliber. They offer critical commentary on how social class is alive - but not always alive and well - on their campuses and in their classrooms. Ultimately, the collective message is an empowering one, with recommendations for institutional change and, barring that, transformation of our classrooms into more democratic and class-aware spaces.
Working in Class combines theoretical analyses of class effects and personal stories of fifteen academics of varying original class locations. As a collection, it is an invaluable guide to a multitude of key issues, such as how to survive in academia as a woman from the working class, and how best to teach low-income students of color. The book's many informed voices and its structural clarity make it an important new look at the academy.
This anthology from a variety of disciplines and social locations across academia is a treasure trove of insight, information and practical advice for those four million of us who earn our livings in academe. But more than that it is a window into the dynamics of how higher education in the U.S. produces and reproduces the professional middle class and its culture. Its special vantage point is that the authors combine their personal experiences of social class with the rigors of their particular disciplines to reveal the unacknowledged class-cultural conflicts and outright classism that is routinely involved in "going to college." For undergraduates it is the ideal text for bringing social class to the diversity discussion that today so richly informs many curricula. It's not just about recognizing and overcoming classism, but as many of these authors demonstrate, there is great potential for transformative learning in wading into the very different experiences and values both students and faculty have depending on their zip codes of origin. The volume as a whole argues that these differences could easily become assets rather than liabilities if honest light is shed on them. Working in Class shines that light brilliantly.