Mattering: The African American Experience in Historically White Fraternities

The purpose of this study was to qualitatively explore the issues of race and mattering in relation to African American participation within historically White fraternities. Participant perspectives were obtained through six interviews with African American males at four collegial institutions withi...

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Main Author: Summers, Eric J.
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks@UNO 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1195
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2178&context=td
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spelling ndltd-uno.edu-oai-scholarworks.uno.edu-td-21782016-10-21T17:05:23Z Mattering: The African American Experience in Historically White Fraternities Summers, Eric J. The purpose of this study was to qualitatively explore the issues of race and mattering in relation to African American participation within historically White fraternities. Participant perspectives were obtained through six interviews with African American males at four collegial institutions within the Southeastern Region of the United States. Critical Race Theory was utilized to framed issues surrounding race in a homogenous Greek context. A second lens, Rosenberg and McCullough's (1981) concept of mattering, provided a comprehensive description of participants' feelings of significance within the inter-racial Greek experience. Thematic findings indicate that although African American members are recruited to be a part of a particular historically White fraternity's brotherhood, they initially experience marginality. Through continued interaction, the fraternal bonds become strengthened with participants rising to varying levels of leadership within the group, and, mattering to their White fraternal brothers. Other themes related to African American participation within historically White fraternities include: (a) One or no family member that attended college, (b) no immediate family members that are Greek, (c) significance of race is downplayed, (d) limited fraternal knowledge prior to entering college, (e) recruitment is driven by image, status, and counter assumption, (f) stereotypical organizations are racial holdouts; and, (g) discord exist with other African Americans that disapprove of the inter-racial experience. 2010-05-14T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1195 http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2178&context=td University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations ScholarWorks@UNO Mattering marginality Greek fraternity Critical Race Theory micro-aggression
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Mattering
marginality
Greek
fraternity
Critical Race Theory
micro-aggression
spellingShingle Mattering
marginality
Greek
fraternity
Critical Race Theory
micro-aggression
Summers, Eric J.
Mattering: The African American Experience in Historically White Fraternities
description The purpose of this study was to qualitatively explore the issues of race and mattering in relation to African American participation within historically White fraternities. Participant perspectives were obtained through six interviews with African American males at four collegial institutions within the Southeastern Region of the United States. Critical Race Theory was utilized to framed issues surrounding race in a homogenous Greek context. A second lens, Rosenberg and McCullough's (1981) concept of mattering, provided a comprehensive description of participants' feelings of significance within the inter-racial Greek experience. Thematic findings indicate that although African American members are recruited to be a part of a particular historically White fraternity's brotherhood, they initially experience marginality. Through continued interaction, the fraternal bonds become strengthened with participants rising to varying levels of leadership within the group, and, mattering to their White fraternal brothers. Other themes related to African American participation within historically White fraternities include: (a) One or no family member that attended college, (b) no immediate family members that are Greek, (c) significance of race is downplayed, (d) limited fraternal knowledge prior to entering college, (e) recruitment is driven by image, status, and counter assumption, (f) stereotypical organizations are racial holdouts; and, (g) discord exist with other African Americans that disapprove of the inter-racial experience.
author Summers, Eric J.
author_facet Summers, Eric J.
author_sort Summers, Eric J.
title Mattering: The African American Experience in Historically White Fraternities
title_short Mattering: The African American Experience in Historically White Fraternities
title_full Mattering: The African American Experience in Historically White Fraternities
title_fullStr Mattering: The African American Experience in Historically White Fraternities
title_full_unstemmed Mattering: The African American Experience in Historically White Fraternities
title_sort mattering: the african american experience in historically white fraternities
publisher ScholarWorks@UNO
publishDate 2010
url http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1195
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2178&context=td
work_keys_str_mv AT summersericj matteringtheafricanamericanexperienceinhistoricallywhitefraternities
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