An
Unexpected Minority
Price: $24.95
Subtitle: White Kids in an Urban School
Author: Edward Morris
Subject: Sociology/Racial Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3721-5
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3720-7
Pages: 192 pp. 7 tables
Praise for An Unexpected Minority
"An Unexpected Minority is a thoughtful and engaged story of
how race gets lived and negotiated in school. The book illuminates the
persistent benefits of whiteness for white students, even in a setting
where they are a numerical minority and also highlights the struggle
for these same students to carve out a place for themselves in a
setting where they are rendered problematic."-Amanda E. Lewis, author
of Race in the Schoolyard
Description:
Racial and ethnic minority groups in the United States have
been growing rapidly in recent decades. Projections based on census
data indicate that, in coming years, white people will statistically
dominate noticeably fewer regions and public spaces. How will this
reversal of minority status affect ideas about race? In spaces
dominated by people of color, will attitudes about white privilege
change? Or, will deeply rooted beliefs about racial inequality be
resilient to numerical shifts in strength?
In An Unexpected Minority, sociologist Edward Morris
addresses these far-reaching questions by exploring attitudes about
white identity in a Texas middle school composed predominantly of
African Americans, Latinos, and Asians. Based on his ethnographic
research, Morris argues that lower-income white students in urban
schools do not necessarily maintain the sort of white privilege
documented in other settings. Within the student body, African American
students were more frequently the "cool" kids, and white students
adopted elements of black culture-including dress, hairstyle, and
language-to gain acceptance. Morris observes, however, that racial
inequalities were not always reversed. Stereotypes that cast white
students as better behaved and more academically gifted were often
reinforced, even by African American teachers.
Providing a new and timely perspective to the significant
role that non-whites play in the construction of attitudes about
whiteness, this book takes an important step in advancing the
discussion of racial inequality and its future in this country.
About the Author:
Edward Morris is an assistant professor of sociology at Ohio
University in Athens.
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Price: $24.95
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