Whose School Is It?
243 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:15 Jan 2006
ISBN:9780292709911
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Whose School Is It?

Women, Children, Memory, and Practice in the City

University of Texas Press

Whose School Is It?: Women, Children, Memory, and Practice in the City is a success story with roadblocks, crashes, and detours. Rhoda Halperin uses feminist theorist and activist Gloria Anzaldúa's ideas about borderlands created by colliding cultures to deconstruct the creation and advancement of a public community charter school in a diverse, long-lived urban neighborhood on the Ohio River. Class, race, and gender mix with age, local knowledge, and place authenticity to create a page-turning story of grit, humor, and sheer stubbornness. The school has grown and flourished in the face of daunting market forces, class discrimination, and an increasingly unfavorable national climate for charter schools. Borderlands are tense spaces. The school is a microcosm of the global city.

Many theoretical strands converge in this book—feminist theory, ideas about globalization, class analysis, and accessible narrative writing—to present some new approaches in urban anthropology. The book is multi-voiced and nuanced in ways that provide authenticity and texture to the real circumstances of urban lives. At the same time, identities are threatened as community practices clash with rules and regulations imposed by outsiders.

Since it is based on fifteen years of ethnographic fieldwork in the community and the city, Whose School Is It? brings unique long-term perspectives on continuities and disjunctures in cities. Halperin's work as researcher and advocate also provides insider perspectives that are rare in the literature of urban anthropology.

A gem. . . . A gripping book that conveys so much insight and illumination into the construction of educational identities in working-class urban communities that it must be shared. Anita Puckett, Director, Appalachian Studies Program, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
RHODA H. HALPERIN is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Cincinnati.
  • Maps
  • Preface and Acknowledgments
  • Prologue
  • Part I. Creation: Writing Urban Memory
    • 1. Literacy, School, and Identity in an Urban, Working-Class Community
    • 2. Founding Mothers and the Creation of the Charter
    • 3. The Politics of the Charter and the Politics of Space
    • 4. Hiring Staff: Teachers, Kin, and an Instructional Leader
  • Part II. Deterritorialization
    • 5. Opening the School: Whose School Is It?
    • 6. Kids in the Urban Borderland: A Collage
    • 7. Clashing Philosophies, Clashing Practices: Follow the Leader versus Ring around the Rosie
    • 8. Academic Borderlands: MICROgirls, A Math Club for Girls (With Stephanie Jones)
    • 9. Moments: Collaboration and Consensus in the Borderland
  • Part III. Reterritorialization
    • 10. Negotiating the Borderland
    • 11. Deterritorialization, Crisis Management, and the Beginnings of Reterritorialization (With Lionel Brown and Roberta Lee)
    • 12. Borderlands, Factions, and Inverted Imagined Communities
    • 13. Taking Back the School
    • 14. Transforming and Cycling Borderlands of Community, Culture, and Class (With Holly Winwood, Janice Glaspie, and Lionel Brown)
  • Epilogue: Reinventing Urban Memory
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
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