ABSTRACT

This book uses Bourdieu’s sociological approach for research as a jumping-off point for framing our understandings and analyses of China and Chinese education. Three major themes—inequality, competition, and change—are explored across several theoretical and contextual bases. Bringing together top scholars in the field, the volume examines empirical studies that analyse social (im)mobility through education for students affected by the social divides of class, culture and rural/urban locations; teacher identity and the field of schooling in the current Chinese environment and going forward; and the university as an institution for the production of knowledge about education in the globalising academy. Offering insights into the historical and cultural context for China’s educational landscape, the contributions of this book revisit Bourdieusian concepts from a new empirical vantage point and bring together key studies that illuminate new pathways for the study of Chinese sociology of education.

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction

China, Education, and Bourdieu

chapter 2|25 pages

Market Economy, Social Change, and Educational Inequality

Notes for a Critical Sociology of Chinese Education

chapter 4|19 pages

“Make It Back”?

The Social Positioning of the New Generation of Rural Teachers in China

chapter 5|16 pages

Educational Practice in a Field of Mediation

Elite University Graduates’ Participation Experience of an Alternative Program of Schoolteacher Recruitment for Rural China

chapter 7|24 pages

Resistance as a Sociological Process of Resilience

Stories of Under-resourced Migrant Families 1

chapter 8|31 pages

Academic Competition and Parental Practice

A Study of Habitus and Change

chapter 9|17 pages

Capital Conversion and School Change

A Bourdieusian Analysis

chapter 11|25 pages

Learning to Theorise from Bourdieu

Using Zhōng wén (中文) in English for Research Publication Purposes