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Sociology - General & Miscellaneous, Economic Conditions in the United States, Economic Conditions - General & Miscellaneous, Gender Studies - General & Miscellaneous, Socio-Cultural Anthropology - General & Miscellaneous, Students & Student Life, Social
Class Construction: White Working-Class Student Identity in the New Millennium by Carrie Freie β€” book cover

Class Construction: White Working-Class Student Identity in the New Millennium

by Carrie Freie
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Overview

Class Construction explores class, racial, and gender identity construction among white, working-class students. Delving into River City High School, Freie asks what happens to the adolescent children of working-class families when economic changes such as globalization and technological advancements have altered the face of working-class jobs. Mass consumerism, greater availability of college level education, lack of a cohesive class identity, and racial and religious politics all combine to create a new working-class identity for today's youth. Featuring interviews with the River City High School students, Class Construction aims to understand how class is conceptualized among American, working-class youths. Class Construction is ideal for courses on sociology, education, gender studies, and American studies, as well as high school educators and administrators.

Synopsis

Class Construction: White Working-Class Student Identity in the New Millennium explores the identity development of a group of white working-class high school students in a de-industrialized area of the Northeast. This ethnographic study explores class, racial and gender identity construction, and focuses on the ways the students' perceptions of their current and future classed, raced, and gendered selves are negotiated within the context of the school structure.

About the Author, Carrie Freie

Carrie Freie is assistant professor of education at Penn State Altoona.

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Editorials

Lois Weis

Set against massive shifts in the global economy, which has destabilized the traditional working class,Class Construction: White Working-Class Student Identity in the New Millennium deftly probes the present and future of today's white working-class youth as they plunge forward in the midst of America's jobless recovery. Employing ethnographic methods set firmly within changing structural context, Freie's book is a "must read" for anyone who desires to learn more about the repositioning of working class youth in the midst of intesnified attendance at colleges coupled with the declining value of a college credential, the tight job market in the United States, and radically changing domestic roles inside a group traditionally wedded to hegemonic masculinity. Freie's work is sure to become a classic with respect to class rearrangement at the turn of the century.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2007
Publisher
The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group Inc
Pages
138
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780739115473

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