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This innovative portrait of student life in an urban high school
focuses on the academic success of African-American students,
exploring the symbolic role of academic achievement within the
Black community and investigating the price students pay for
attaining it. Signithia Fordham's richly detailed ethnography
reveals a deeply rooted cultural system that favors egalitarianism
and group cohesion over the individualistic, competitive demands of
academic success and sheds new light on the sources of academic
performance. She also details the ways in which the achievements of
sucessful African-Americans are "blacked out" of the public
imagination and negative images are reflected onto black
adolescents. A self-proclaimed "native" anthropologist, she
chronicles the struggle of African-American students to construct
an identity suitable to themselves, their peers, and their families
within an arena of colliding ideals. This long-overdue contribution
is of crucial importance to educators, policymakers, and
ethnographers.
Most Americans would never willingly revisit their high school
experiences; the nation's school systems reflect the broader
society's hierarchical emphasis on race, class, and gender. While
schools purport to provide equal opportunities for all students,
this rarely happens in actuality-particularly for girls. In Downed
by Friendly Fire, Signithia Fordham unmasks and examines
female-centered bullying in schools, arguing that it is essential
to unmask female aggression, bullying, and competition, all of
which directly relate to the structural violence embedded in the
racialized and gendered social order. For two and a half years,
Fordham conducted field research at "Underground Railroad High
School," a suburban high school in upstate New York. Through a
series of composite student profiles, she examines the girls'
relationships to academic achievement, social competition, and
aggression toward one another. Fordham argues that girls
academically "compete to lose," which only perpetuates their
subordination through the misrecognition of their own competitive
behaviors. She goes further to expand the meaning of violence to
include what is seen as normal, including suffering, humiliation,
and social and economic abuse. Using the concept "symbolic
violence," Fordham theorizes the psychological and social damage
suffered especially by black girls in schools. The five narratives
in Downed by Friendly Fire ultimately highlight the pain and
suffering this violence produces as well as the ways in which it
promotes inequality, exclusion, and marginalization among girls.
Most Americans would never willingly revisit their high school
experiences; the nation's school systems reflect the broader
society's hierarchical emphasis on race, class, and gender. While
schools purport to provide equal opportunities for all students,
this rarely happens in actuality-particularly for girls. In Downed
by Friendly Fire, Signithia Fordham unmasks and examines
female-centered bullying in schools, arguing that it is essential
to unmask female aggression, bullying, and competition, all of
which directly relate to the structural violence embedded in the
racialized and gendered social order. For two and a half years,
Fordham conducted field research at "Underground Railroad High
School," a suburban high school in upstate New York. Through a
series of composite student profiles, she examines the girls'
relationships to academic achievement, social competition, and
aggression toward one another. Fordham argues that girls
academically "compete to lose," which only perpetuates their
subordination through the misrecognition of their own competitive
behaviors. She goes further to expand the meaning of violence to
include what is seen as normal, including suffering, humiliation,
and social and economic abuse. Using the concept "symbolic
violence," Fordham theorizes the psychological and social damage
suffered especially by black girls in schools. The five narratives
in Downed by Friendly Fire ultimately highlight the pain and
suffering this violence produces as well as the ways in which it
promotes inequality, exclusion, and marginalization among girls.
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