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Women without Class: Girls, Race, and Identity Paperback – January 1, 2003
- Print length248 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity of California Press
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 2003
- Dimensions6 x 0.88 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100520235428
- ISBN-13978-0520235427
- Lexile measure1470L
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Editorial Reviews
Review
From the Inside Flap
"What a wonderful book! It deserves to be placed next to Paul Willis' Learning to Labouror in front of it. Bettie seamlessly weaves bold theoretical arguments together with a nuanced portrayal of senior high school girls, Anglo and Mexican, working-class and middle-classor in their words, the preps, hicks, smokers/rockers/trash and the Mexican preps, cholas/cholos, hard-cores, and las chicas. Her book is equally a challenge to feminists who can see only gender, and theorists of class and race who cannot see gender at all. It is one of the finest empirical and conceptual discussions of how gender, race, and class intersect. It is also a page-turner, lucidly and often movingly written."Elizabeth Long, author of From Sociology to Cultural Studies: New Perspectives
"Julie Bettie has written an extraordinary book. Engagingly written, empathetic, and filled with insight, Women Without Class makes a clear and convincing case that essentialized concepts of race and gender are not only inaccurate, but even worse, part of the ideological structure that renders class invisible. Bettie's book sets a new standard of excellence for studies of schooling and social identities."George Lipsitz, author of American Studies in a Moment of Danger
"In this fresh and realistic book, Julie Bettie tells us uncomfortable, but important truths about the lives of young women in an American high school. Within the kaleidoscope of gender and ethnic identities are injuries, exclusions, and the powerful (though often hidden) effects of class. This is a book to be read by everyone who wants to understand contemporary youth."R.W. Connell, author of Gender and Power: Society, the Person, and Sexual Politics
"Women Without Class is an important contribution to scholarship on young women and the intersections of race and class with gender. The book is fantastically rich in observation and analysis. The author resists with vigor a victimology perspective, but at the same time shows how the marginalization of class from contemporary work in the field results in a failure to understand how assumptions about post-feminism, female success, and social mobility produce new and virulent exclusions."Angela McRobbie, Professor of Communications at Goldsmiths College London and author of Feminism and Youth Culture
"Bettie is doing something no one has done before: she explores the many ways that BOTH Mexican American and White adolescent girls interpret and enact racially gendered class identities. This book is essential reading for any serious scholar of gender, class, and race-ethnicity."Denise Segura, Professor of Sociology, University of California-Santa Barbara
"Rather than following traditional and stereotypical notions common in mainstream U.S. sociology and criminology, which portray youth as delinquent and criminals, Bettie gives the reader the vivid representations of a group of working-class youth who are searching for 'creative responses to the injuries of inequality.'"Esther Madriz, author of Nothing Bad Happens to Good Girls: Fear of Crime in Women's Lives
From the Back Cover
"What a wonderful book! It deserves to be placed next to Paul Willis' "Learning to Labour--or in front of it. Bettie seamlessly weaves bold theoretical arguments together with a nuanced portrayal of senior high school girls, Anglo and Mexican, working-class and middle-class--or in their words, the preps, hicks, smokers/rockers/trash and the Mexican preps, cholas/cholos, hard-cores, and las chicas. Her book is equally a challenge to feminists who can see only gender, and theorists of class and race who cannot see gender at all. It is one of the finest empirical and conceptual discussions of how gender, race, and class intersect. It is also a page-turner, lucidly and often movingly written."--Elizabeth Long, author of "From Sociology to Cultural Studies: New Perspectives
"Julie Bettie has written an extraordinary book. Engagingly written, empathetic, and filled with insight, "Women Without Class makes a clear and convincing case that essentialized concepts of race and gender are not only inaccurate, but even worse, part of the ideological structure that renders class invisible. Bettie's book sets a new standard of excellence for studies of schooling and social identities."--George Lipsitz, author of "American Studies in a Moment of Danger
"In this fresh and realistic book, Julie Bettie tells us uncomfortable, but important truths about the lives of young women in an American high school. Within the kaleidoscope of gender and ethnic identities areinjuries, exclusions, and the powerful (though often hidden) effects of class. This is a book to be read by everyone who wants to understand contemporary youth."--R.W. Connell, author of "Gender and Power: Society, the Person, and Sexual Politics
""Women Without Class is an important contribution to scholarship on young women and the intersections of race and class with gender. The book is fantastically rich in observation and analysis. The author resists with vigor a victimology perspective, but at the same time shows how the marginalization of class from contemporary work in the field results in a failure to understand how assumptions about post-feminism, female success, and social mobility produce new and virulent exclusions."--Angela McRobbie, Professor of Communications at Goldsmiths College London and author of "Feminism and Youth Culture
"Bettie is doing something no one has done before: she explores the many ways that BOTH Mexican American and White adolescent girls interpret and enact racially gendered class identities. This book is essential reading for any serious scholar of gender, class, and race-ethnicity."--Denise Segura, Professor of Sociology, University of California-Santa Barbara
"Rather than following traditional and stereotypical notions common in mainstream U.S. sociology and criminology, which portray youth as delinquent and criminals, Bettie gives the reader the vivid representations of a group of working-class youth who are searching for 'creative responses to the injuries of inequality.'"--Esther Madriz, author of "Nothing Bad Happens to Good Girls: Fear of Crime in Women's Lives
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : University of California Press (January 1, 2003)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 248 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0520235428
- ISBN-13 : 978-0520235427
- Lexile measure : 1470L
- Item Weight : 12.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.88 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,394,881 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #4,525 in Comparative Religion (Books)
- #11,981 in Popular Culture in Social Sciences
- #15,381 in Cultural Anthropology (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2017I read this for my cultural diversity class. It was interesting to read of the experiences of working-class white and Mexican-American girls at Waretown High.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2017Thank you
- Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2014Used for Human Development/Women's Studies course. Relatable based on the topics of race, gender, class, and identity.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 10, 2014Thank you!
- Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2017It's was okay.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2014Great book that deals with how we see other races, cultures, and or ethnicity in light of our own. Will make you think and reevaluate your take on Race in America. A Thought provoking book by Dr. Julie Bettie. She is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of California (Santa Cruz). I hope to one day have a successful career and at least one book dealing with matters of race from my stance on psychology and theology. She has helped me out a lot in that regard.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2009This is a great ethnography for anyone interested in teaching and/or school administration. Should be required reading before anyone steps foot in the classroom! Teachers expectations and actions matter!
Julie Bettie (2003) conducted an ethnographic study about how high school girls experience class in the school, and how their experiences of class intersect with race and gender. Bettie presents a case that girls and women have often been ignored in studies of class, and that when girls are studied it is usually with a focus on their gender over all other parts of identity. Her study demonstrates how girls' experience of class influences how they experience gender and race, and vice versa. She does not seek to establish class as the primary aspect of one's identity, but rather to show how the social discourses of class, race, and gender interact with each other and the individual to shape our identity and understanding of the world. Bettie is particularly interested in how these discourses shape girls' educational experience and attainment.
Bettie outlines the recent scholarship and theoretical debates regarding class, gender, race, and education. Studies on class include the symbolic meaning of class and how these meanings inform our identity. Feminist theory incompletely recognizes women as subjects with class, making gender the primary analytical feature. This tendency within feminist scholarship hides the way class impacts women's experience of gender (and race and age), making class invisible in the scholarship. The ways class is hidden or invisible in scholarship is demonstrated through Bettie's analysis of the research and through her study.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2014Read this book for a summer course. Interesting perspectives, helped me get a better grade.
Top reviews from other countries
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Marco MagniReviewed in Italy on January 20, 20185.0 out of 5 stars ottimo
importante e interessantissimo libro, descrive la realtà sociale con sensibilità e acume. Uno dei migliori libri di sociologia dell'educazione che ho letto.


