Skip to product information
1 of 1

Making and Molding Identity in Schools

Regular price £25.50
Sale price £25.50 Regular price £25.50
Sale Sold out
Delves into the lives and words of adolescents to examine how they assert their ethnic and racial identities within school settings.Making and Molding Identity in Schools delves into the lives of a...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 12 September 1996
View Product Details

Delves into the lives and words of adolescents to examine how they assert their ethnic and racial identities within school settings.

Making and Molding Identity in Schools delves into the lives of adolescents to examine how youths assert ethnic and racial identities in the face of policies, discourses, and practices that work both to reproduce and challenge social categories. Detailed case studies illuminate adolescent voices and perspectives, revealing that identity and academic engagement emanate not just from societal and cultural forces, but also from ordinary, day to day interactions and experiences within school settings. Drawing on contemporary social theory, the author emphasizes the political and relational nature of race and ethnicity, and illustrates the potential for identities and ideologies to vary over time and across school settings. The book provides a needed expansion of theories that link youth identities and ideologies solely to cultural, economic and political forces, and provides insight into settings that allow students to engage without discarding their ethnic and racial selves.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £25.50
Pages: 272
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series, Power, Social Identity, and Education
Publication Date: 12 September 1996
ISBN: 9780791430828
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

"I liked this book for several reasons. First, it provided me with a fairly good overview of the discourse in anthropology and education that deals with ethnic or racial identity and the schooling process. Second, it suggests that schools can make a difference and that students do not react to schooling in a neatly predictable way according to their ethnic or racial identity. It suggests, then, that schools can be important cultural sites for the reconstruction of identity consistent with the empowerment of marginalized youth and that they can challenge power relations and beliefs in the dominant culture. Finally, I liked the book because of its attempt to understand all of these issues through a presentation and interpretation of several stories of youth in school." — Dennis L. Carlson, Miami University

List of Tables


Acknowledgments


Introduction: Way to an Inquiry


PART I. FRAMES ON IDENTITY AND ACADEMIC ENGAGEMENT


1. The Politics of Identity: Historical and Theoretical Contexts


2. Youths' Frames on Engagement


PART II. DISCIPLINARY TECHNOLOGIES RESISTED: UNCONVENTIONAL DENTIES


3. Marbella Sanchez on Marginalization and Silencing


4. Carla Chávez on Masking and Isolation


PART III. DOMINANT DISCOURSES ACCEPTED: CONFORMIST INDENTIES


5. Sonia Gonzales on Craziness


6. Ryan Moore on Fitting In


PART IV. EMPOWERING SPEECH ACTS: ENCOURAGING TRANCULTURAL DENTIES


7. Johnnie Betts on Recasting the Self


8. Patricia Schmidt on Alternative Discourse


PART V. EPILOGUE


9. Epilogue


Notes


References


Index