2017
DOI: 10.1080/1369183x.2017.1315867
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‘Tutored within an inch of their life’: morality and ‘old’ and ‘new’ middle class identities in Australian schools

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Cited by 20 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…This was also the case with the ‘soft individualism’ described by Kusserow (2004), in which de‐emphasising competition and promoting pro‐social values had become normal for the parents and teachers of more affluent middle‐class children in the US. Similar patterns were observed by Reay (2008) in the UK and by Butler, Ho and Vincent (2017) in Australia. ‘Soft individualism’ is not necessarily inimical to neoliberalism since neoliberal ideology makes a range of promises beyond mere material comfort, ranging from self‐efficacy and self‐fulfilment to self‐expression and self‐actualisation (Dardot and Laval, 2014; Brown, 2015).…”
Section: Three Theoretical Paradigmssupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…This was also the case with the ‘soft individualism’ described by Kusserow (2004), in which de‐emphasising competition and promoting pro‐social values had become normal for the parents and teachers of more affluent middle‐class children in the US. Similar patterns were observed by Reay (2008) in the UK and by Butler, Ho and Vincent (2017) in Australia. ‘Soft individualism’ is not necessarily inimical to neoliberalism since neoliberal ideology makes a range of promises beyond mere material comfort, ranging from self‐efficacy and self‐fulfilment to self‐expression and self‐actualisation (Dardot and Laval, 2014; Brown, 2015).…”
Section: Three Theoretical Paradigmssupporting
confidence: 80%
“…When American parents give their children non‐contingent praise and tell them they are unique and wonderful human beings (Sorkhabi, 2005; Ochs and Kremer‐Sadlik, 2015), they are drawing on their awareness of sentimental individualism. They are also doing this when they pass on pro‐social values (Bellah et al , 1985) and when they assert their faith in their children’s abilities, and the importance of their happiness, in opposition to neoliberal individualism (Butler, Ho and Vincent, 2017).…”
Section: Three Theoretical Paradigmsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this context, white children's friendships with ethicised Others were viewed as accumulative assets to a child's white middle-class identity (Reay et al 2007). Butler, Ho, and Vincent (2017) have likewise shown how, for middle class white parents in this same research sample, ideals of 'community', as well as advocating for 'worldliness', 'real world exposure', 'diversity' and communitarianism, all rewarded the middle-class self at the expense of specific Others (non-white and nonmiddle class). Returning to the rural example from Wilding and Nunn (2018), it is clear that the co-production of multiculturalism in Hometown is an unequal space of meanings and definitions that shape intercultural encounters.…”
Section: Pathways Forward and Future Research Directionsmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…Other issues noted were the potential for contagion introduced by tutoring (echoing a similar thought to Gee), while a negative impact on quality of life was also noted due to the tutoring and emphasis on extra-curricular activities, which were described as excessively competitive and instrumental in approach. These views were similar in nature to the negative perceptions of tertiary educated parents towards high-achieving Asian students in a gentrifying area (Butler, Ho and Vincent, 2017), who themselves placed a greater emphasis on local community and reciprocity.…”
Section: Hyper-selectivity and Polarizationmentioning
confidence: 71%