The Cosby Cohort: Blessings and Burdens of Growing Up Black Middle Class
The Cosby Cohort examines the childhood experiences of second generation middle class Blacks who grew up in mostly White spaces during the 1980s and 1990s. This probing book explores their journey to upward mobility, including the discrimination they faced in White neighborhoods and schools, the extraordinary pressures placed upon them to achieve, the racial lessons imparted to them by their parents, their tenuous relationships with Black children of other classes, and the impact that all of these experiences had on their adult racial identities. At young ages, this generation of middle class Blacks, whom Harris coins as the Cosby Cohort, was faced with racial displacement, frustration, and the ever-present pressure to emerge victorious against the pull of downward mobility. Even in adulthood, they continue to negotiate the tensions between upward mobility and maintaining ties to the larger Black community and culture. While these young Blacks may have grown up watching The Cosby Show, as the book reveals, their stories indicate a much more complex reality than portrayed by the show.
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The Cosby Cohort: Blessings and Burdens of Growing Up Black Middle Class
The Cosby Cohort examines the childhood experiences of second generation middle class Blacks who grew up in mostly White spaces during the 1980s and 1990s. This probing book explores their journey to upward mobility, including the discrimination they faced in White neighborhoods and schools, the extraordinary pressures placed upon them to achieve, the racial lessons imparted to them by their parents, their tenuous relationships with Black children of other classes, and the impact that all of these experiences had on their adult racial identities. At young ages, this generation of middle class Blacks, whom Harris coins as the Cosby Cohort, was faced with racial displacement, frustration, and the ever-present pressure to emerge victorious against the pull of downward mobility. Even in adulthood, they continue to negotiate the tensions between upward mobility and maintaining ties to the larger Black community and culture. While these young Blacks may have grown up watching The Cosby Show, as the book reveals, their stories indicate a much more complex reality than portrayed by the show.
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The Cosby Cohort: Blessings and Burdens of Growing Up Black Middle Class

The Cosby Cohort: Blessings and Burdens of Growing Up Black Middle Class

by Cherise A. Harris
The Cosby Cohort: Blessings and Burdens of Growing Up Black Middle Class

The Cosby Cohort: Blessings and Burdens of Growing Up Black Middle Class

by Cherise A. Harris

Hardcover

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Overview

The Cosby Cohort examines the childhood experiences of second generation middle class Blacks who grew up in mostly White spaces during the 1980s and 1990s. This probing book explores their journey to upward mobility, including the discrimination they faced in White neighborhoods and schools, the extraordinary pressures placed upon them to achieve, the racial lessons imparted to them by their parents, their tenuous relationships with Black children of other classes, and the impact that all of these experiences had on their adult racial identities. At young ages, this generation of middle class Blacks, whom Harris coins as the Cosby Cohort, was faced with racial displacement, frustration, and the ever-present pressure to emerge victorious against the pull of downward mobility. Even in adulthood, they continue to negotiate the tensions between upward mobility and maintaining ties to the larger Black community and culture. While these young Blacks may have grown up watching The Cosby Show, as the book reveals, their stories indicate a much more complex reality than portrayed by the show.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442217652
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 02/14/2013
Series: Perspectives on a Multiracial America
Pages: 270
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Cherise Harris is associate professor of sociology at Connecticut College. She has published articles in a number of journals, including Race, Gender, and Class, and Teaching Sociology. is the coeditor of the book Getting Real about Race: Hoodies, Mascots, Model Minorities, and Other Conversations.

Table of Contents

Preface
1: The Genesis of the Cosby Cohort: 1980s-1990s
2: Training for the Race: The Cosby Cohort and the Black Middle Class Culture of Mobility
3: Race Lessons: What the Cosby Cohort Really Learned about Blacks and Blackness
4: Cast Out of the Race: The Reality of Childhood Intraracial Rejection
5: Losing the Race?: Attachment, Ambivalence, and Retreat
6: Where Do We Go From Here?
Bibliography

What People are Saying About This

Nikki Khanna

Through captivating interview excerpts and a sophisticated analysis that shows great depth and sensitivity, Harris sheds new light on the often overlooked complexities of growing up in the Black middle class. The Cosby Cohort is groundbreaking and is essential reading for anyone interested in the growing heterogeneity of the African American community and the implications of the increasing class diversity for intra-racial relations, group cohesion, and Black identity development. This book will no doubt become an instant classic.

Mary Pattillo

While the Cosby kids on television always seemed happy and well-adjusted, the cohort of middle-class black youth across the country that was watching the Cosby family were having a harder time of it. Harris offers the voices of African Americans who look back at their childhoods and see their aspirations for greater success, their alienation from blackness, and the difficulties of navigating the two pressures. The Cosby Cohort powerfully discredits the myth of a monolithic black experience and raises the continuing uncertainties around black sociopolitical unity in the context of increasing racial residential integration and uneven socioeconomic success. It is a revealing and moving account of forging new black identities.

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