白人与种族他者中向上流动个体的阶级认同谈判:一个美法比较

J. Naudet, Shirin Shahrokni
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本章探讨了法国和美国少数民族中向上流动的中产阶级成员的阶级认同。通过对美国和法国的非裔美国人和北非移民后裔的深入访谈,并将其与种族优势群体的同行进行比较,本章表明,种族进程显著地塑造了我们的少数族裔受访者的流动经历以及所面临的困境、挑战和身份谈判的范围。借鉴了批判种族理论和少数民族文化的流动性理论(Neckerman, Carter, & Lee)。(1999),这表明种族歧视的持续突出,加上与社会弱势群体成员保持联系,极大地塑造了我们的受访者理解其阶级位置的方式。本章进一步指出,在塑造受访者的流动经历和阶级认同方面,研究不足的特定国家的意识形态特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Class Identity Negotiations of Upwardly Mobile Individuals Among Whites and the Racial Other: A USA–France Comparison
This chapter explores the class identities of upwardly mobile and middle-class members of racial minorities in France and the United States. Through in-depth interviewing with African Americans and descendants of North African immigrants in, respectively, the United States and France, and comparing these with their counterparts of the racially dominant group, the chapter shows that racial processes significantly shape the mobility experiences and the range of dilemmas, challenges and identity negotiations faced by our minority respondents. Drawing on the Critical Race Theory and on the minority culture of mobility theory (Neckerman, Carter, & Lee., 1999), it suggests that the ongoing salience of racial discrimination coupled with the maintenance of ties with socially disadvantaged members of their groups significantly shape the ways in which our respondents make sense of their class location. The chapter further points to under-researched nation-specific ideological repertoires in shaping our respondents’ mobility experiences and class identities.
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