Young, Gifted and Diverse
Origins of the New Black Elite
Princeton : Princeton University Press, [2022]
Format: Book
Description: viii, 463 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
"Contemporary research on Black Americans has focused mainly on the plight of the poor and paid little attention to internal variation and status differentiation in the broader Black community. In Divergent Currents, the authors explore the backgrounds and experiences of an understudied subset of the Black population in the U.S.: the Black Elite. Although the descendants of enslaved Africans, the children of immigrants, and the offspring of intermarried parents have all contributed to the great diversityof the new Black elite, its otherwise heterogeneous members generally share one trait in common: the possession of a college degree, often from a very selective institution. Given that a college education is essential for advancement in today's globalized, knowledge-based economy, the college campus is now the crucible for elite class formation, no less for Blacks than other social groups. The authors draw on a unique source of data to study the new Black elite in the process of formation at 28 selectiveinstitutions of higher education. The baseline survey gathered comprehensive data on subjects' social origins, including detailed information about the family, school, and neighborhoods they inhabited at ages 6, 13, and as seniors in high school, as wellas data on their personal perceptions, values, aspirations, and attitudes. This survey data is paired with 78 in-depth interviews with Black undergraduates at two competitive institutions and eleven focus group sessions with 75 students at an Ivy League university. The authors identify and explore seven dimensions of Black diversity (racial identification, skin tone, nativity, generation, region of origin, gender, social class, and prior experiences of segregation). They ultimately aim to understand how intraracial diversity complicates traditional notions of race, class, and social mobility in the new Black professional class"-- Provided by publisher.
Other Authors:
Kramer, Rory, 1981- author.
Massey, Douglas S., author.
Torres, Kimberly C., 1975- author.
Kramer, Rory, 1981- author.
Massey, Douglas S., author.
Torres, Kimberly C., 1975- author.
Contents:
Black diversity in historical perspective -- Origins of the new Black elite -- Experiences of segregation -- Identities and attitudes -- Pathways to elite education -- Campus social experiences -- Downsides of upward mobility -- Emerging elite identities-- Leaks in the pipeline -- Convergence and intersectionality in the Black elite.
Subjects:
African American college students -- Longitudinal studies.
African American college students -- Race identity.
African American college students -- Psychology.
Elite (Social sciences) -- Education -- United States.
African Americans -- Social life and customs.
United States -- Race relations -- History.
African American college students -- Longitudinal studies.
African American college students -- Race identity.
African American college students -- Psychology.
Elite (Social sciences) -- Education -- United States.
African Americans -- Social life and customs.
United States -- Race relations -- History.
ISBN:
9780691237459
Availability | |||
---|---|---|---|
Call Number | Location | Shelf Location | Status |
REF SOCIAL SCI Race Cha | Main (Downtown) | Third Level, Reference | Available for in-library use |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 405-443) and index.