Index
The Lives of Working Class Academics
ISBN: 978-1-80117-058-1, eISBN: 978-1-80117-057-4
Publication date: 12 December 2022
This content is currently only available as a PDF
Citation
(2022), "Index", Reilly, I.B. (Ed.) The Lives of Working Class Academics, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 229-233. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80117-057-420221018
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2023 Iona Burnell Reilly. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited
INDEX
Academia
, 104–105, 173–174
autoethnography as research method
, 174
graduation
, 176–178
Academic
, 135–136
Academic capitalism
, 43
Academic self
, 64
ethnographic self
, 60–66
need for story
, 67–68
space and place
, 59–60
TLT
, 66–67
Academic translator
, 49
Academy
, 89–90, 95, 97
accent
, 93
beginnings
, 90–93
black hair
, 93–95
Accent
, 93, 188–189, 194–195
Accentism
, 114
Actual working classes
, 33
Aerial imagination
, 22–23
Albatross
, 21–23
Alcatrace
, 22
American Educational Research Association (AERA)
, 10
Angels
, 17–18
Anti-terrorism strategies
, 82
Art as cultural resource
, 141–145
Artefacts
, 44
Artist
, 135–136
Artistic capital
, 158–159
Assumptions
, 187–188
Autoethnographic analysis
, 203–204
Autoethnographic/autoethnography. See also Collaborative autoethnography
, 67
approach
, 136
artefacts
, 44
fictions
, 44–45
question as scientific method of analysis
, 160–161
as research method
, 174
Awkward voices
, 207–212
Bachelard, Gaston
, 19
Black hair
, 93–95
Black women
, 93–94, 97
British Association of Applied Linguistics (BAAL)
, 168
Capital
, 174
Capital-Labour relation in Marxism
, 4–5
Capitalism
, 2
Career identities
, 107–108
Casualisation
, 43
Certificate in English Language Teaching to Adults (CELTA)
, 166–168
Childhood
, 20–21
Class
, 103–104, 123–126, 136, 156–157
Christmas in 1985
, 162--164
discourse of roots
, 161–164
identity
, 199
importance in class
, 212–213
PhD Graduation Ceremony
, 167--168
question of autoethnography as scientific method of analysis
, 160–161
significance of routes in formation of classed self-identifications
, 164–170
society
, 208
Classism
, 110, 181
Cloud
, 24
Co-interview
, 46–48
Code-switching
, 94–95
Collaborative autoethnography
, 45
celebration, support and pride
, 50–51
co-interview
, 46–48
methodology
, 45–46
methods
, 44–45
pain, disconnection and isolation
, 48–50
working-class journeys into and through academia
, 42–43
working-class women wanting and working in academia
, 43–44
Collaborative meaning-making
, 45–46
College Based Higher Education (CBHE)
, 129
Consumerism
, 43
COVID-19 pandemic
, 177
Critical Education approach
, 6
Critical Education pedagogy
, 7
Critical Race Theory (CRT)
, 10, 95–96
Critical realism
, 11
Cube of identity
betterment
, 76
faces of oppression
, 84–85
identity, students and familiarity
, 84
islamophobia, power of language and microaggressions
, 81–83
language, religion, culture and family
, 76–78
meritocracy and imposter syndrome
, 83–84
outsider amidst insiders
, 81
return to university and career
, 79–81
university, silent departure and ineffective role models
, 78–79
unwelcome and subliminal messages
, 75
Cultural assets
, 138, 141
Cultural capital
, 129, 135–136, 138, 141, 158–159
Cultural representation
, 203–204
Cultural wealth
, 183
Desire
, 136
art as cultural resource
, 141–145
case
, 137–138
cultural capital
, 138–141
educator
, 149–150
Salisbury Cathedral
, 145–148
working class identified in educational discourses
, 136–137
Double consciousness
, 82
Dual identity
, 83, 117–118
Dynamic imagination
, 21
Economic orders
, 158
Education
, 2–3, 58, 130–131, 194–195
Educational approaches
, 206
Educational attainment
, 209–210
Educational capital
, 158–159
Educational settings
, 206–207
Educational system
, 205–206
Elicitation techniques
, 44–45
Employment
, 2–3
English as a second language (ESOL)
, 166–168
English HE widening participation policy and strategies
, 104
English to Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL)
, 107–108
Equality Act (2010)
, 37
Equality and Human Rights Commission’s Equalities Act 2010
, 8–9
Estuary English
, 188–189
accent, social hierarchy and education
, 194–195
celebrating accents, diversity
, 199–200
class identity
, 199
internalised oppression
, 199
school
, 189–192
social work academic
, 197–199
social worker
, 195
social worker to lecturer
, 196
university
, 192, 194, 196–197
Ethnographic self
, 60–66
disadvantage
, 64–66
Failure
, 83
Feasibility
, 11–13
Field–habitus clash
, 115–116
‘Fish out of water’ phenomenon
, 108, 110, 115–116
Flight
, 21
Flying creature
, 22–23
Free school meal (FSM)
, 137–138
Further education (FE)
, 107–108
Gender
, 194
Gonzo pedagogy
, 125–126
Gradational model
, 4
Habitus
, 103–106, 139
Hair
, 93–94
Higher education (HE)
, 32, 42, 101–102, 108, 177, 203
accessing
, 106–108
class
, 31–32
class and HE journey
, 33–36
early life and schooling
, 30–31
meanings of working-classness
, 32–33
social class and confounding of mythology of meritocratic social mobility
, 36–38
student to staff
, 38–39
Higher Education Institution (HEI)
, 96, 156–157, 182–183
Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA)
, 96
Hysteresis
, 110–111
Identity
, 58–59, 156–157
Imaginary flight
, 24
Imposter syndrome
, 83–84, 112
Imposterism
, 111
Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD)
, 137
Industrial capitalism
, 4–5
Inequality
, 2–3
Inequity
, 5–6
Initial teacher education programme (ITE programme)
, 60
Intense silence
, 207–212
Internalised oppression
, 199
International Conferences on Critical Education (ICCE)
, 9–10
Introjected values
, 110–113
Ireland
, 102, 194, 206, 207, 211, 212
Irish
, 90, 102, 103, 114, 144, 194, 203, 206–208, 212
Islam
, 82
Islamophobia
, 81–83
Jobs
, 103
Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies (JCEPS)
, 9–10
Language
, 20–21
Linguistic capital
, 158–159, 181–182
Local Government Act (1986)
, 58
Low participation neighbourhood
, 103–104
Marginalisation
, 82
Margins
, 213–216
Market differentiation
, 39
Marketisation
, 43
Marxism
, 5–6, 157
Marxist pedagogy
, 6
Mature students
, 34
Media representation
, 124
Memory
, 18–19
Mental Health Act
, 195–196
Meritocracy
, 83–84
Meritocratic social mobility, mythology confounding of
, 36–38
Microaggressions
, 81, 83, 113, 180
Minoritised groups
, 80
Mr Airport Man
, 18, 23–24
Back to the Future
, 24–26
pilgrimages
, 18–19
Muslims
, 82
Mystification
, 11–13
Mythology of meritocracy
, 36–38
Narrative research
, 61–62
Neoliberalism
, 5–8
New academy
, 132–133
New Labour government of 1990s
, 106
New York City (NYC)
, 61–63
Nostalgic
, 19
Objective limits
, 110
Occupation
, 2–3
Office for Students (OfS)
, 137
Open University (OU)
, 175–176
Oppression, faces of
, 84–85
Optimum approach
, 125–126
Othering
, 82
Participation of Local Areas (POLAR)
, 137
Photo elicitation
, 44–45
Post-class
, 3
Poverty-related attainment gap
, 58
Power geometry
, 59
Power of language
, 81–83
Praxis
, 6
PREVENT policy
, 195
Private vs. public sector work
, 33
Privatisation
, 43
Procellariiformes
, 22
Professional identities
, 107–108
Racism
, 10, 90–91
Received pronunciation (RP)
, 114
Reflexive methods
, 181
Relation model
, 4
Research Excellent Framework
, 43
Resistance
, 182
Reverie
, 19, 21
Role models
, 78–79
Salisbury Cathedral
, 145–148
School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)
, 96
Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD)
, 68
Scroll back method
, 44–45
Shame
, 127, 130–131
Sink school
, 104–105
Social capital
, 129
Social class. See also Working class
, 2, 4, 36, 38, 42, 136, 156–157, 206
de-centring
, 8–11
grades of social status vs.
, 4–5
mystification and feasibility
, 11–13
neoliberalism
, 5–8
Social groups
, 27
Social hierarchy
, 194–195
Social interactions
, 156–157
Social mobility
, 102
industry
, 37
Social status grades
, 4–5
Social worker
, 195
Socialisation
, 140–141
Socio-cultural and consumption markers
, 2–3
Space and place
, 59–60
Strangers in Paradise: Academics from the Working Class (Ryan & Sackrey)
, 104–105
Structuralism
, 140–141
Superdiversity
, 156–157
Supply–demand nexus
, 32–33
Teacher education
, 60–61
Teaching Excellence Framework
, 43
Thames Estuary English
, 190–192
There is no alternative (TINA)
, 12
Third sector organisations (TSOs)
, 37
Toxic narratives
, 125–126
Transformative Learning and Teaching (TLT)
, 66–67
Trinity College Dublin (TCD)
, 207–211
University and College Union (UCU)
, 97
University College Dublin (UCD)
, 211
Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A)
, 147
Wandering albatross
, 22
Welfare classes
, 137–138
WhatsApp messages
, 46–47
White Supremacy
, 10
Widening participation
, 104–106
Wing
, 24
Workers and bosses
, 31
Working class
, 101–102, 123–124
academic conference
, 124–125
academics
, 203–204
culture
, 103–104
families
, 103
identified in educational discourses
, 136–137
identity
, 89–90
journeys into and through academia
, 42–43
women wanting and working in academia
, 43–44
Working-classness, meanings of
, 32–33
Working-class academics (WCA)
, 173–174, 177–178
benefits
, 181–182
difficulties
, 178–180
examples
, 174
Xeno-racism
, 10
Zoom
, 47–48
- Prelims
- Chapter 1 Navigating the Relational Character of Social Class for Capitalism in the Academy
- Chapter 2 Mr Airport Man and the Albatross: A Reverie of Flight, Hope and Transformation
- Chapter 3 Power, Corruption and Lies: Fighting the Class War to Widen Participation in Higher Education
- Chapter 4 ‘Friends First, Colleagues Second’: A Collaborative Autoethnographic Approach to Exploring Working-Class Women's Experiences of the Neoliberal Academy
- Chapter 5 Coming to Terms With the Academic Self: Place, Pedagogy and Teacher Education
- Chapter 6 The Rubik's Cube of Identity
- Chapter 7 Uptown Top Ranking: From a Council Estate to the Academy
- Chapter 8 One's Place and the Right to Belong
- Chapter 9 Who Do You Think You Are? The Influence of Working-Class Experience on an Educator in a Process of Becoming
- Chapter 10 John Constable Was My First Art Teacher: Construction of Desire in a Working-Class Artist/Academic
- Chapter 11 Class Is a Verb: Lived Encounters of a Minority Ethnic Academic Who Self-Identifies With Aspects of Working-Class Cultures in the United Kingdom
- Chapter 12 Reading the Posh Newspapers
- Chapter 13 Thames Estuary Academic
- Chapter 14 Concluding Chapter: Tackling ‘the Taboo’: The Personal Is Political (and It's Scholarly Too)
- Afterword
- Enriching Universities and Scholarship by Prohibiting Class Discrimination
- Index