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The Lives of working class academics : getting ideas above your station / edited by Iona Burnell Reilly (University of East London, UK).

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2022.Description: 1 online resource (308 pages)ISBN:
  • 9781801170598
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 378.12 23
Online resources:
Contents:
Chapter 1. Navigating the relational character of social class for capitalism in the academy / Alpesh Maisuria -- Chapter 2. Mr. Airport man & the albatross: A reverie of flight, hope and transformation / Craig A. Hammond -- Chapter 3. Power, corruption and lies: Fighting the class-war to widen participation in higher education / Colin McCaig -- Chapter 4. 'Friends first, colleagues second': A collaborative autoethnographic approach to exploring working-class women's experiences of the neoliberal academy / Carli Rowell and Hannah Walters -- Chapter 5. Coming to terms with the academic self: Place, pedagogy and teacher education / ML White -- Chapter 6. The rubik's cube of identity / Khalil Akbar -- Chapter 7. Uptown top ranking: From a council estate to the academy / Marcia A. Wilson -- Chapter 8. One's place and the right to belong / Iona Burnell Reilly -- Chapter 9. Who do you think you are? The influence of working class experience on an educator in a process of becoming / Peter Shukie -- Chapter 10. John constable was my first art teacher: Construction of desire in a working-class artist/academic / Samantha Broadhead -- Chapter 11. Class is a verb: Lived encounters of a minority ethnic academic who self-identifies with aspects of working-class cultures in the uk / Stephen Wong -- Chapter 12. Reading the posh newspapers / Teresa Crew -- Chapter 13. Thames estuary academic / Jo Finch -- Concluding Chapter: Tackling 'the taboo': the personal is political (and it's scholarly too) / Michael Pierse.
Summary: Traditionally academia has been seen as an elite profession, for those with an academic background and from the middle/upper classes. This is what makes the life of a working class academic all the more interesting, rich and powerful. How have they become who they are in an industry steeped in elitism? How have they navigated their way, and what has the journey been like? Do they continue to identify as working class or has their social positioning and/or identities shifted? Iona Burnell Reilly presents a collection of autoethnographies, written by working class academics in higher education - how they got there, what their journeys were like, what their experiences were, if they faced any struggles, conflicts, prejudice and discrimination, and if they had to, or still do, negotiate their identities. Told in their own words the academics chart their journeys and explore their experiences of becoming an academic while also coming from a working class background. Although a working class heritage under-pins the autoethnography of each of the writers, the interlocking sections between class, race, gender and sexuality will also be relevant.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E-Books E-Books National Library of India Online Resource 378.12 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available EBK000040566ENG
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Chapter 1. Navigating the relational character of social class for capitalism in the academy / Alpesh Maisuria -- Chapter 2. Mr. Airport man & the albatross: A reverie of flight, hope and transformation / Craig A. Hammond -- Chapter 3. Power, corruption and lies: Fighting the class-war to widen participation in higher education / Colin McCaig -- Chapter 4. 'Friends first, colleagues second': A collaborative autoethnographic approach to exploring working-class women's experiences of the neoliberal academy / Carli Rowell and Hannah Walters -- Chapter 5. Coming to terms with the academic self: Place, pedagogy and teacher education / ML White -- Chapter 6. The rubik's cube of identity / Khalil Akbar -- Chapter 7. Uptown top ranking: From a council estate to the academy / Marcia A. Wilson -- Chapter 8. One's place and the right to belong / Iona Burnell Reilly -- Chapter 9. Who do you think you are? The influence of working class experience on an educator in a process of becoming / Peter Shukie -- Chapter 10. John constable was my first art teacher: Construction of desire in a working-class artist/academic / Samantha Broadhead -- Chapter 11. Class is a verb: Lived encounters of a minority ethnic academic who self-identifies with aspects of working-class cultures in the uk / Stephen Wong -- Chapter 12. Reading the posh newspapers / Teresa Crew -- Chapter 13. Thames estuary academic / Jo Finch -- Concluding Chapter: Tackling 'the taboo': the personal is political (and it's scholarly too) / Michael Pierse.

Traditionally academia has been seen as an elite profession, for those with an academic background and from the middle/upper classes. This is what makes the life of a working class academic all the more interesting, rich and powerful. How have they become who they are in an industry steeped in elitism? How have they navigated their way, and what has the journey been like? Do they continue to identify as working class or has their social positioning and/or identities shifted? Iona Burnell Reilly presents a collection of autoethnographies, written by working class academics in higher education - how they got there, what their journeys were like, what their experiences were, if they faced any struggles, conflicts, prejudice and discrimination, and if they had to, or still do, negotiate their identities. Told in their own words the academics chart their journeys and explore their experiences of becoming an academic while also coming from a working class background. Although a working class heritage under-pins the autoethnography of each of the writers, the interlocking sections between class, race, gender and sexuality will also be relevant.

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