Discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in New Delhi, India

This dissertation examines the ideological connections between schooling, mobility, and social difference among students in New Delhi. In it, I argue that educational mobility, especially with regard to English-language education, is an ideology which seems to offer a path to reduce social differenc...

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Main Author: Proctor, Lavanya Murali
Other Authors: Domínguez, Virginia R.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/726
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1911&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-19112019-10-13T04:59:16Z Discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in New Delhi, India Proctor, Lavanya Murali This dissertation examines the ideological connections between schooling, mobility, and social difference among students in New Delhi. In it, I argue that educational mobility, especially with regard to English-language education, is an ideology which seems to offer a path to reduce social difference while in fact protecting it. I also argue that people who desire mobility engage in discursive practices which attempt to emphasize how their social positions are better than the ones they aspire to, a process I call discursive mobility. These discourses are inherently conflicted and contradictory, something I argue is characteristic of discursive responses to ideologies of educational mobility. Thus, I inquire into how different ideologies and discourses (dominant and subordinate) relating to social difference, education, and mobility interact, the prominent role of English in ideologies of education and mobility, and how the process of attempting mobility produces inherently contradictory ways of being. This research was conducted in two government schools and one private school in New Delhi, using a number of methods including participant observation, surveys, interviews, group discussions, and matched guise technique. I describe the discursive contradictions that come from attempts at discursive mobility, how language is implicated in ideologies of educational mobility, how social ideologies of privilege affect schooling experiences and mobility possibilities, how students discursively respond to social difference, and how the discursive worlds of students in government and private schools differ. 2010-07-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/726 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1911&context=etd Copyright 2010 Lavanya Murali Proctor Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaDomínguez, Virginia R. Khandelwal, Meena class education English India mobility youth Anthropology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic class
education
English
India
mobility
youth
Anthropology
spellingShingle class
education
English
India
mobility
youth
Anthropology
Proctor, Lavanya Murali
Discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in New Delhi, India
description This dissertation examines the ideological connections between schooling, mobility, and social difference among students in New Delhi. In it, I argue that educational mobility, especially with regard to English-language education, is an ideology which seems to offer a path to reduce social difference while in fact protecting it. I also argue that people who desire mobility engage in discursive practices which attempt to emphasize how their social positions are better than the ones they aspire to, a process I call discursive mobility. These discourses are inherently conflicted and contradictory, something I argue is characteristic of discursive responses to ideologies of educational mobility. Thus, I inquire into how different ideologies and discourses (dominant and subordinate) relating to social difference, education, and mobility interact, the prominent role of English in ideologies of education and mobility, and how the process of attempting mobility produces inherently contradictory ways of being. This research was conducted in two government schools and one private school in New Delhi, using a number of methods including participant observation, surveys, interviews, group discussions, and matched guise technique. I describe the discursive contradictions that come from attempts at discursive mobility, how language is implicated in ideologies of educational mobility, how social ideologies of privilege affect schooling experiences and mobility possibilities, how students discursively respond to social difference, and how the discursive worlds of students in government and private schools differ.
author2 Domínguez, Virginia R.
author_facet Domínguez, Virginia R.
Proctor, Lavanya Murali
author Proctor, Lavanya Murali
author_sort Proctor, Lavanya Murali
title Discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in New Delhi, India
title_short Discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in New Delhi, India
title_full Discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in New Delhi, India
title_fullStr Discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in New Delhi, India
title_full_unstemmed Discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in New Delhi, India
title_sort discourses on language, class, gender, education, and social mobility in three schools in new delhi, india
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2010
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/726
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1911&context=etd
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