Women without Class: Girls, Race, and Identity

Women without Class: Girls, Race, and Identity

by Julie Bettie
Women without Class: Girls, Race, and Identity

Women without Class: Girls, Race, and Identity

by Julie Bettie

eBook

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Overview

In this ethnographic examination of Mexican-American and white girls coming of age in California’s Central Valley, Julie Bettie turns class theory on its head, asking what cultural gestures are involved in the performance of class, and how class subjectivity is constructed in relationship to color, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality. A new introduction contextualizes the book for the contemporary moment and situates it within current directions in cultural theory.

Investigating the cultural politics of how inequalities are both reproduced and challenged, Bettie examines the discursive formations that provide a context for the complex identity performances of contemporary girls. The book’s title refers at once to young working-class women who have little cultural capital to enable class mobility; to the fact that analyses of class too often remain insufficiently transformed by feminist, ethnic, and queer studies; and to the failure of some feminist theory itself to theorize women as class subjects.

Women without Class makes a case for analytical and political attention to class, but not at the expense of attention to other social formations.

 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780520957244
Publisher: University of California Press
Publication date: 09/18/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Julie Bettie teaches cultural politics and cultural theory at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where she is an Associate Professor of Sociology.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction to the 2014 Edition

1. Portraying Waretown High
2. Women without Class
3. How Working-Class Chicas Get Working-Class Lives
4. Hard-Living Habitus, Settled-Living Resentment
5. Border Work between Classes
6. Sameness, Difference, and Alliance
7. Conclusion

Notes
References 
Index
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