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| Preference
as Performance: Doing Social Class and Gender in Three School Libraries
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Mark
Dressman
University of
Houston |
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This
study examines the construct of reader preference along the lines
of gender and social class. Data were collected through focused interviews
and participant observation from one third-grade class in each of
three elementary school libraries that served children from a range
of ethnic and social class backgrounds. The study argues that children’s
expressions of preference are often enactments of what they believe
it means to be categorically male or female, whereas their ways of
relating to different genres of text, as well as how they choose to
read, often enact the “habitus,” or material logic, of their social
class. This analysis is complicated by three events in which the doing
of gender or class by students is interrupted by stronger desires.
The article concludes with a reconsideration of preference as a construct,
and questions why educators might want to know what children like
to read in the first place. |
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JLR
v.
29 no. 3
1997
pp. 319–361 |
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