|
Class
Background Assignment
This
assignment asks you to take a detached look at yourself and
your family background through the prism of social class. It
asks you to do this through an integration of three types of
data: 1) Interviews with family members or family friends; 2)
Field observation, in which you seek to look at yourself, your
life, and your family background in a new way, informed by the
principles of ethnography; and 3) Course readings, which you
will draw on to contextualize and explain what class has meant
for your family over the past several generations. You are of
course welcome to supplement the course readings with other
relevant sources. The balance between these approaches may depend
partly on whether you have family members close by, but my expectation
is that you will write a paper that combines all three. If you
perceive a problem with this, please consult me.
Interviews.
Conduct a minimum of two in-depth interviews of family members
or family friends of different generations (ideally a
parent and grandparent). Focus on what their occupation
and economic standing were, what kind of life they led,
how they perceived their position in society, what changes
they experienced, what they thought about class. Try to
get a sense both of what class your parents and grandparents
belonged to and what this meant for their lives. (You
may of course also address how class intersected with
other social identities, particularly those based on race
and gender.) Your goal is to construct a geneology of
class, using Gilbert and Kahl's model (but modifying it
if you deem this necessary), in your family over the past
three generations. Take notes during your interviews with
an eye to using quotations from them in your eventual paper. Do
not write your paper as a summary of your interviews; the
interviews are intended to provide data for your own analysis
of your class background.
Field
Observation.
Choose some site from where you live or grew up that you think
reflects and illustrates your class background. Try to look
at this physical and social environment in in
a detached and wondering way. How is the meaning of class played
out or reflected in various contexts? What is distinctive about
your class environment and how has it shaped the kind of person
you are becoming? Possible observation sites include neighborhoods,
workplaces, places where people spend their leisure, etc. Take
fieldnotes on your observations as if you were an anthropologist
studying an unfamiliar tribe. Try to wonder about things you
normally take for granted. You may want to quote directly from
your field notes in your paper.
Course
Readings.
I expect you to
demonstrate your mastery of the readings in this assignment.
Indeed, the readings should help you put in context and to
conceptualize and explain what you find out through
interviews and ethnographic observation. Be thinking about
how the various readings in Modules 1, 2 and 3 relate to what
you are hearing and seeing. Note:
While not limited to these, possible useful concepts and ideas
might include: the emic vs. etic distinction; relevant ideas
from Marx and Weber; Gilbert's discussion of the different
dimensions of class and his model of the U.S. class structure;
the concepts of social and cultural capital; weapons of the
weak and everyday forms of resistance; the issue of the relationship
between race and class; Clark and Lipset's arguments about
the decline of social class; Collins and Yeskel's points about
the impact of increasing inequality on families and on society;
neoliberalism and changes in government policies; the distinction
between income and wealth; explanations of increased inequality,
including declines in unionization and the civic sector and
the rise of winner-take-all markets; etc. These are all tools
for you to think with in understanding your class background
better.
Your
Paper
Write
a paper of approximately 4-6 pages analyzing your class background
over the past three generations and and exploring how it has
shaped your socialization and personal development. Weave together
interview material, ethnographic observation, and course readings
to present your story; do not make these separate sections.
While it is certainly ok to explore the importance of other
factors besides social class, don't lose sight of it--this is
a paper about your class background and the significance it
has had for you. At the end, you may want to address whether
this exercise has affected your understanding of yourself or
your family.
Your
paper should include a brief section on method in which
you explain whom you interviewed and what kinds of settings
you focused on for your ethnographic observations. References
to the readings should involve proper APA-style citation
both in-text and at the end in the reference list. Please
avoid lengthy quotations.
APA style guidelines may be found
by clicking Citation Resources on the left toolbar.
Click
here for grading checklist
Your papers are due at the beginning of class on Tuesday, March 31st |