TY - JOUR
T1 - The Culture Project: diasporic negotiations of ethnicity, identity and culture among teachers, pupils and parents in Chinese language schools
AU - Archer, Louise
AU - Francis, Becky
AU - Mau, Ada
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Notions of culture, ethnicity and identity are highly political (and also personally meaningful) issues within diasporic communities. Complementary schools are particularly interesting sites in this respect, as they are often set up with an explicit cultural agenda of 'preserving' or 'maintaining' 'traditional' culture and language within diasporic communities. In this paper, we draw on qualitative data from an ESRC funded study conducted in six Chinese complementary schools to consider how pupils (n=60), parents (n=24) and teachers (n=21) in these schools construct and negotiate issues of culture and identity. We consider the ways in which the cultural agenda of the schools is constructed and experienced, teasing out the ways in which cultural discourses and pupil identities are deployed (and resisted, reworked) within the space of Chinese schools. Finally we consider the extent to which the schools are perceived by the young people to be 'successful' (or not) in their efforts to make pupils feel 'more Chinese'.
AB - Notions of culture, ethnicity and identity are highly political (and also personally meaningful) issues within diasporic communities. Complementary schools are particularly interesting sites in this respect, as they are often set up with an explicit cultural agenda of 'preserving' or 'maintaining' 'traditional' culture and language within diasporic communities. In this paper, we draw on qualitative data from an ESRC funded study conducted in six Chinese complementary schools to consider how pupils (n=60), parents (n=24) and teachers (n=21) in these schools construct and negotiate issues of culture and identity. We consider the ways in which the cultural agenda of the schools is constructed and experienced, teasing out the ways in which cultural discourses and pupil identities are deployed (and resisted, reworked) within the space of Chinese schools. Finally we consider the extent to which the schools are perceived by the young people to be 'successful' (or not) in their efforts to make pupils feel 'more Chinese'.
U2 - 10.1080/03054981003775293
DO - 10.1080/03054981003775293
M3 - Article
VL - 36
SP - 407
EP - 426
JO - Oxford Review of Education
JF - Oxford Review of Education
IS - 4
ER -