Introduction: Processes, Frameworks and Motivations
Respectable Knowledge: Experience and Interpretation
Historical Legacies: Respectability and Responsibility
Developing and Monitoring a Caring Self
(Dis)Identifications of Class: On Not Being Working Class
Ambivalent Femininities
Becoming Respectably Heterosexual
Refusing Recognition: Feminisms
Conclusions
Beverley Skeggs is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at Lancaster University. She has published The Media; Issues in Sociology; Feminist Cultural Theory; Formations of Class and Gender; Class, Self, Culture Sexuality and the Politics of Violence and Safety (with Les Moran) and Feminism after Bourdieu (with Lisa Adkins), and with Helen Wood, Reacting to Reality TV: Audience, Performance, Value and Reality TV and Class, along with many journal articles on class and culture. As an ESRC Professorial Fellow she developed a “sociology of values and value’’ that included projects on the digital economy and prosperity theology, and whilst Director of the Atlantic Fellows Programme, established the ‘Global Economies of Care’ theme at the LSE.
This book is brilliant. Formations of Class and Gender is a
sophisticated and passionately written account of the classed and
gendered identities of a small group of working-class white women
who live in the north-west of England. It is ethnography at its
best, having been built on long-term, thoughtful engagements in the
field. When Beverly Skeggs met these women they were all students
on a variety of ′caring′ courses at a further education college.
More than eleven years later, the production of this text testifies
to the quality of theoretical analysis which can be produced if
only those who fund research or press for lists of publications
were willing to acknowledge that leading edge work normally
requires real time. The text is concerned with the production of
cultural and social relations and is located within an analytical
framework which draws on the work of Bourdieu... Overall the text
is a robust piece of writing which I have already recommended as
required reading to my research students.
*Gender and Education*
Skegg′s Bourdieu-influenced account of British cultures of class
provides a useful empirical corrective to the more grandiose
theorizing within recent cultural studies, underscoring not just
the economic but the cultural and attitudinal gulf between
working-class individuals and the left/feminist intellectuals who
claim to be their allies. For this reason alone, it should be
required reading.
*International Journal of Cultural Studies*
In a discipline that boasts a high division of labour, this book
goes a long way in dismantling the futile divide between class
theory and feminism. It is an articulate and impassioned
ethnography, fuelled by an anger of inequality but also an anger at
those who are reluctant to challenge it. At a time when
sociologists seem less concerned with the tangible and more
interested in the abstract, Skeggs shows how these can be used
productively together; theory becomes a means to an end rather than
an end in itself... This book really deserves to be read and taken
seriously. It is a good example of responsible research which seeks
to bring out the pains and humour of working- class life and the
ways in which people negotiate their environments... But the
greatest achievement of this book is that it gives a voice to a
group of women in the hope that they can ′...no longer be ignored,
made invisible, deconstructed to irrelevance, dismissed as part of
a redundant concept, or pathologized as just another "social
problem"′ (168). In our present political climate, what work could
be more important than that?
*Paul Johnson*
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