The Birth of Academic Subalterns: How Do Foreign Students Embody the Global Hegemony of American Universities?

被引:53
作者
Kim, Jongyoung [1 ]
机构
[1] Kyung Hee Univ, Dept Sociol, Seoul 130701, South Korea
关键词
academic capital; global hegemony of American universities; research university; studying in the United States; transnational education; INTERNATIONAL GRADUATE-STUDENTS; KOREAN STUDENTS; EXPERIENCES; ADJUSTMENT; EDUCATION;
D O I
10.1177/1028315311407510
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
This study analyzes the learning and cultural experiences of Korean graduate students in the United States. Based on 50 qualitative interviews, the study focuses on how global knowledge and the power relations of language determine their education in a transnational system. At a theoretical level, the study criticizes both the functionalist approaches that limit analysis to socialization processes and the pragmatic analyses that seek to solve problems of adaptation. Rejecting these perspectives, this study instead analyzes how a series of power relations based on knowledge and language operate in a global education environment to shape cultural attitudes as well as daily interactions and interprets the result as the daily embodiment of the global hegemony enjoyed by American universities. I explain this mechanism by examining global, national, and local interactions within the global hierarchy of higher education, contradictions within the Korean university system, and students' transnational learning experiences. During these processes, Korean graduate students, operating as academic subalterns in the global educational system, also contribute to this global hegemony through their active consent to and participation in the assumptions of American research universities. Ultimately, I argue that because the production and consumption of academic capital operates within the power structure of global higher education, we need to pay attention to how various power relations conjoin in transnational learning and teaching, and how they dynamically generate academic domination beyond the functionalist approach.
引用
收藏
页码:455 / 476
页数:22
相关论文
共 43 条
[21]  
Kim J. Y., 2010, EC SOC, V85, P237
[22]   Aspiration for global cultural capital in the stratified realm of global higher education: why do Korean students go to US graduate schools? [J].
Kim, Jongyoung .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 2011, 32 (01) :109-126
[23]   Difficulties in quality doctoral academic advising Experiences of Korean students [J].
Kim, Youngjoo .
JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION, 2007, 6 (02) :171-193
[24]   Korean students' adaptation to post-secondary studies in Canada: A case study [J].
Lee, K ;
Wesche, M .
CANADIAN MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW-REVUE CANADIENNE DES LANGUES VIVANTES, 2000, 56 (04) :637-689
[25]  
Lee K., 2005, THESIS U ALBERTA EDM
[26]  
Lee S, 2008, KEDI J EDUC POLICY, V5, P113
[27]   Dynamics of national and global competition in higher education [J].
Marginson, S .
HIGHER EDUCATION, 2006, 52 (01) :1-39
[28]  
Marginson S., 2006, J STUD INT EDUC, V11, P303
[29]   Global field and global imagining: Bourdieu and worldwide higher education [J].
Marginson, Simon .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 2008, 29 (03) :303-315
[30]  
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, 2004, INT TRAD HIGH ED OPP