Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7425-3511-4 • Hardback • November 2005 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-1-4616-1508-8 • eBook • November 2005 • $40.50 • (£30.00)
Stephen L. Muzzatti is Assistant Professor of sociology at Ryerson University, Toronto. C. Vincent Samarco is Associate Professor of American literature and creative writing at Saginaw Valley State University. He also teaches creative writing at the Saginaw Correctional Facility.
Chapter 1 Happy Accidents: the Unofficial Story of How I Became an Academic
Chapter 2 Working it Out
Chapter 3 Personal, Professional, and Political Paths to the Study of the Crimes of the Powerful
Chapter 4 A Stranger to Paradise: Working-Class Graduate in the Culture of Academia
Chapter 5 Can a Working-Class Girl Have Roots and Wings? White Trash in the Ivory Tower
Chapter 6 Working Class Need Not Apply: Job Hunting, Job Interviews, and the Working-Class Experience in Academe
Chapter 7 Making Class Matter: My Life as a Semi-Earhole
Chapter 8 White, Working Class, and Feminist: Working Within The Master's House and Finding Home Again
Chapter 9 "Gimme That!": The Working-Class Student Meets the Working-Class Subject
Chapter 10 Critique of Domination: The Pain, Praxis, and Polemics of Working-Class Consciousness in Academia
Chapter 11 Working-Class Values and Life in Academe: Examining the Dissonance
Chapter 12 Teaching from the Wrong Side of the Tracks: Challenging Privilege and Authority In the Classroom
Chapter 13 The Meaning of Class Differences in the Academic World
Chapter 14 Trajectory and Transformation of a Working-Class Girl into an Upper-Middle-Class Associate Dean
Chapter 15 Making the Grade: Imposters in the Ivory Tower
Chapter 16 An Unwashed's Knowledge of Archaeolgy: Class and Merit in Academic Placement
Chapter 17 Class Enriching the Classroom: the "Radical" as Rooted Pedagogic Strengths
This collection is quite effective in capturing a representation of the diversity, including the similar and dissimilar experiences, of those aspiring and successful academics from a working class background.
— Gregg Barak, Eastern Michigan University; author of Violence and Nonviolence: Pathways to Understanding
This is a relevant and emotionally compelling collection of essays. The authors delve deeply into to the issues of class conflict and ambivalence, the tension between the professional-managerial class and the working class, and the obstacles to social mobility. Recommended....
— Charles Varano, California State University, Sacramento
This is a relevant and emotionally compelling collection of essays. The authors delve deeply into to the issues of class conflict and ambivalence, the tension between the professional-managerial class and the working class, and the obstacles to socialmobility. Recommended.
— Charles Varano, California State University, Sacramento
1. Extended critique of the meritocracy
2. Larger scope than the competing texts: fully tracing how class and power work at all levels of higher education.
3. More critically focused than the competing texts