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Flexible Identities: Exploring race and gender issues among a group of immigrant pupils in an inner-city comprehensive school
52
Citations
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References
1999
Year
EthnicityCritical Race TheoryMulticultural EducationEducationDiverse LearnerRacial StudyBlack ExperienceSocial SciencesBlack Feminist ThoughtIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)RaceCultural IdentityGender StudiesInclusive EducationCultural DiversityAfrican American StudiesFlexible IdentitiesImmigrant PupilsEthnic StudiesIdentity IssueYoung PeopleInner-city Comprehensive SchoolIntersectionalityMulticulturalismEthnic IdentityDisplacement StudiesIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Intercultural EducationCultureLife HistoriesSocial Diversity
AbstractThis paper explores, through the life histories of a group of first and second generation immigrant pupils from the 'Asian' and 'African' diasporas, the complex ways in which 'black' identities have evolved in British society over the past two decades. The phrase 'black identities' is used here not as a racially descriptive term but rather as a signifier of ethnic 'otherness'; to make distinct (from white society) and, at the same time, to unify the experiences of disparate groups of ethnic minority groups as marginals within metropolitan societies. Charting the life histories of a group of students in an inner-city comprehensive school in their own collective and individual voices, the paper provides a glimpse of their perceptions of their status as citizens, their views on cultural identity, and their dreams, aspirations, hopes and desires as young people growing up in contemporary British society.
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