When Race Meets Class

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A01=Rhonda Levine
African American High School Students
African American Teenagers
Author_Rhonda Levine
Basketball Season
Basketball Team
Black Students
Black Studies
Black Youth
Business Administration Curriculum
Category=JBSL
Crime
Discrimation
Drawn Back
Educational and Occupuational Barriers
educational attainment disparities
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnic Identity
Family Networks
Fast Lane
Gender Stratification
GPA
Grade Point Average
High School Drop Outs
institutional barriers
intersectionality research
longitudinal study of African American youth
Low Income African American
Low-Income Households
Oppositional Behavior
Out-of School Suspensions
Persistent Racial Inequality
Post-high School Years
Poverty
qualitative ethnography
Racial Stigma
Racial Stratification
Reduced Cost Lunch
School Attachments
Skip Classes
Social and Cultural Capital
social identity formation
Social Inequality
Social Institutions
Social Mobility
Social Networks
Sociology of Education
Sociology of Sport
Team Sport Type
Unstable Home Lives
Urban Sociology
Urban Studies
Young Man
youth development pathways

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367134891
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jan 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A rare, 15-year ethnography, this book follows the lives of individual, low-income African American youth from the beginning of high school into their early adult years. Levine shows how their interaction and experience with multiple institutions (family, school, community) and individuals (parents, friends, teachers, coaches, strangers) shape their hopes, fears, aspirations, and worldviews. The intersectionality of their social identities—how race, class, and gender come together to influence how they come to think about who they are—influences many behaviors that directly contradict their stated aspirations. Affected, too, by limited access to resources, these youths often take a path profoundly different from their stated values and life goals. Levine explores the volatility and constraints underlying their decision-making and behaviors. The book reveals the critical junctures and turning points shaping life trajectories, challenging many long-held assumptions about the persistence of racial inequality by offering new insights on the educational and occupational barriers facing young African Americans.

Rhonda F. Levine is Professor of Sociology, Emerita, at Colgate University, USA. She is the author of Class, Networks, and Identity (2001) and Class Struggle and The New Deal (1988), and editor of Enriching the Sociological Imagination: How Radical Sociology Changed the Discipline (2005) and Social Class and Stratification: Classic Statements and Theoretical Debates, Second Edition (2006).

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