“People Like Us”: Theorizing First-Generation College as a Marker of Difference

Chase Bollig
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Although composition scholars have long advocated for working-class and under-represented populations on campus, the emergence of “first-generation college” as a marker of difference in public, administrative, and scholarly discourses invites further consideration of how we theorize this marker. As a bureaucratic marker (originating in higher education administration) that exhibits potential for organizing students for self-advocacy across difference, “first-generation college” warrants particular attention from scholars interested in the intersections between literacy studies and rhetoric. This article initiates a conversation about FGC as a marker of difference, observing that the bureaucratic and rhetorical nature of “first-generation college” as a marker necessitates a constitutive rhetorical approach to the term, an investigation of how the use of the term articulates a literate positionality, situates it within local and cultural narratives, and assigns it value. Placing composition scholarship in conversation with interviews with 17 first-generation college and low-income students and alumni of a large state university, this article reads first-generation college literate positionality in light of students’ own use of the identifier and within the context of their accounts of navigating class difference in college.
“像我们这样的人”:第一代大学作为差异标志的理论化
尽管作文学者长期以来一直主张为工人阶级和未被充分代表的校园群体提供教育,但“第一代大学”作为公共、行政和学术话语差异的标志的出现,促使我们进一步考虑如何将这一标志理论化。作为一个官僚标记(起源于高等教育管理),它展示了组织学生跨越差异进行自我宣传的潜力,“第一代大学”值得对读写研究和修辞学之间的交叉点感兴趣的学者特别关注。本文开启了一场关于FGC作为差异标记的对话,观察到“第一代大学”作为标记的官僚主义和修辞性质,需要对该术语采用建构性修辞方法,调查该术语的使用如何阐明文学定位,将其置于地方和文化叙事中,并赋予其价值。本文通过对17名第一代大学生和低收入家庭学生以及一所大型州立大学校友的访谈,将写作奖学金置于对话中,根据学生自己对标识符的使用,并在他们对大学阶级差异的描述的背景下,解读第一代大学生文化定位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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