Elite schools have an intriguing capacity to endure and adapt in the face of social, cultural and political change. They help both to reproduce power, privilege and status and also to regularly produce them afresh. The intricacies involved, over time and place, have attracted the abiding empirical, methodological and conceptual interest of sociologists and historians; recently, anthropologists and geographers have also responded to their allure. Collectively, the focus of such studies is usually on class making and the manner in which gender and race/ethnicity, place and mobility overlap and are part of the mix. This edited collection is framed around the notion of a ‘new sociology of elite education’, but it speaks into this wider space of inquiry in which studies of such schools are becoming more interdisciplinary. In so doing it brings together a new array of conceptual and theoretical tools while also deepening those that already exist. The contributions examine various configurations of contemporary class making and their attendant politics. These explorations are situated in the specificities of geographical locales where the complex dynamics of both national/local educational priorities and global/transnational forces are played out. In addition to showing how these dynamics put pressure on elite schools to redefine them, the book’s diverse international focus shines a light on new and emerging global patterns. This book was originally published as a special issue of British Journal of Sociology of Education.
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Introduction: Sociological silhouettes of elite schooling 1. The transnational track: state sponsorship and Singapore’s Oxbridge elite 2. Elite international schools in the Global South: transnational space, class relationalities and the ‘middling’ international schoolteacher 3. ‘Thousands waiting at our gates’: moral character, legitimacy and social justice in Irish elite schools 4. Elite education and the State in France: durable ties and new challenges 5. The gift economy of elite schooling: the changing contours and contradictions of privileged benefaction 6. Assured optimism in a Scottish girls’ school: habitus and the (re)production of global privilege 7. Elite schools, postcolonial Chineseness and hegemonic masculinities in Singapore 8. Social class as flow and mutability: the Barbados case 9. The role of internationalisation in the schooling of Brazilian elites: distinctions between two class fractions
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780367143220
Publisert
2019-01-21
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
430 gr
Høyde
246 mm
Bredde
174 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
196

Biographical note

Jane Kenway is Emeritus Professor at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, and a Professorial Fellow at Melbourne University. Her research expertise is in socio-cultural studies of education in the context of wider social and cultural change, focusing particularly on matters of power and politics. She is the editor of Elite Schools: Multiple Geographies of Privilege (2016) and Asia as Method in Education Studies: A defiant research imagination (2015). She led the international research team on a multi-national research project titled Elite schools in globalising circumstances: a multi-sited global ethnography, the results of which were published as Class Choreographies: Elite Schools and Globalisation (2016).

Aaron Koh is an Associate Professor in the Department of Educational Administration and Policy at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Education. He does inter- and trans-disciplinary research in the areas of Global Studies in Education and Cultural Studies in Education. He has published two co-edited books, Elite Schools: Multiple Geographies of Privilege (2016) and Education in the Global City: The Manufacturing of Education in Singapore (2016). He is also the co-founding Editor of the Cultural Studies and Transdisciplinarity in Education series.