GODS OR VERMIN: ALTERNATIVE READINGS OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE AMONG AFRICAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN COLLEGE STUDENTS

被引:6
作者
Foster, Kevin [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Cultural Studies Educ Program, Austin, TX 78712 USA
关键词
higher education; racial uplift; student achievement; college ethnography; African students; African American students;
D O I
10.1525/tran.2005.13.1.34
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
This article draws upon Black intellectual history and upon my experiences with Black students on a predominantly White university campus to show how, within the context of a specific community, African-descended students seize upon different ideas about the African American experience in order to promote their academic strivings. I focus on two divergent readings of African Americans' past that are rhetorically deployed by different groups of academically successful students. The first reading of the African American past is prevalent among those whom I refer to as race-conscious high achievers- African American students who embody and discursively reproduce a historically rooted ideology of Black uplift that motivates them in their quest for high grades. The second reading of the African American past is prevalent among those whom I refer to as ethnic-conscious high achievers- African students who draw an ethnic distinction between African Americans and themselves and who use stereotypes about African Americans as the foil against which they construct themselves as academic strivers. The fact that both of these idealized groups locate themselves within the Black student community even as they hold disparate views of African Americans' intellectual legacy points to the community's complexity as well as to its malleability as a conceptual tool in the hands of those who consider themselves members.
引用
收藏
页码:34 / 46
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Teacher beliefs and student achievement in urban schools serving African American students [J].
Love, A ;
Kruger, AC .
JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH, 2005, 99 (02) :87-98
[22]   The menstruation experience: Attitude dimensions among South African students [J].
Padmanabhanunni, Anita ;
Fennie, Thelma .
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY IN AFRICA, 2017, 27 (01) :54-60
[23]   Patrol career interest and perceptions of barriers among African-American criminal justice students [J].
Rossler, Michael T. ;
Scheer, Charles ;
Suttmoeller, Michael J. .
POLICING-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLICE STRATEGIES & MANAGEMENT, 2019, 42 (03) :421-440
[24]   Performance of African American preschool and kindergarten students on the expressive vocabulary test [J].
Thomas-Tate, S ;
Washington, J ;
Craig, H ;
Packard, M .
LANGUAGE SPEECH AND HEARING SERVICES IN SCHOOLS, 2006, 37 (02) :143-149
[25]   Othermothering: Exploring African American Graduate Students' Decision to Pursue the Doctorate [J].
McCallum, Carmen M. .
JOURNAL OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2020, 91 (06) :953-976
[26]   The Influence of Racial Identity on White Students' Perceptions of African American Faculty [J].
Parker, Tara L. ;
Neville, Kathleen M. .
REVIEW OF HIGHER EDUCATION, 2019, 42 (03) :879-901
[27]   Social Support and Success in Higher Education: The Influence of On-Campus Support on African American and Latino College Students [J].
Baker C.N. .
The Urban Review, 2013, 45 (5) :632-650
[28]   Elevating Students' Oral and Written Language: Empowering African American Students Through Language [J].
Pittman, Ramona T. ;
O'Neal, Lynette ;
Wright, Kimberly ;
White, Brittany R. .
EDUCATION SCIENCES, 2024, 14 (11)
[29]   The Power of Peers: Influences on Postsecondary Education Planning and Experiences of African American Students [J].
Holland, Nicole E. .
URBAN EDUCATION, 2011, 46 (05) :1029-1055
[30]   Embedding parental input in instruction of SWPBS behavioral expectations for African American students [J].
Lo, Ya-yu ;
Kourea, Lefki ;
Werunga, Robai N. ;
Owens, Tosha Lynn ;
Collins, Belva .
PREVENTING SCHOOL FAILURE, 2021, 65 (03) :243-254