
- 240 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Life began for Paula Rothenberg in a privileged home in New York City, but it took her to the battlefields of the culture wars on behalf of the underprivileged. Now this veteran of that cultural clash examines the subtle and complex ways in which issues of race, class, and gender impact people’s lives.
A prominent figure in the creation of women’s studies and multicultural studies as academic disciplines, Rothenberg is perhaps best known for her textbook Race, Class and Gender in the United States, which was widely attacked by conservatives defending traditional curricula. Now she shows how higher education upholds race, class, and gender bias and, more generally, analyzes the ways in which many white people’s unwavering belief in their own good intentions leaves them blind to their societal privilege and their role in perpetuating class difference.
In this candid look at social and academic realities, Rothenberg shares incidents from her own life and the lives of family and friends to show how privilege is constructed and to reveal the forces that make us unaware of it. Through recollections of her childhood in an upper middle class Jewish family and her college years in the early sixties, she tells how she discovered that the world one takes for granted as “everyday life” is in fact riddled with privilege of which we are unaware.
Reviewing the social upheaval of the seventies that challenged fundamental assumptions about gender roles, race relations, and even the nature of the family, Rothenberg tells how she gained a new understanding of what it meant to be an educator and activist. In sharing events surrounding the publication of Race, Class and Gender, she offers an inside look at the culture wars and brings her story into the ‘90s with a cogent discussion of hate speech and the “political correctness” controversy.
Rothenberg recalls the early mobilization against sexual harassment and recounts what it was like to create one of the first feminist philosophy courses. She also offers a hard-hitting critique of current teaching practices and a response to critics of multiculturalism and feminism—as well as a look at how de facto segregation continues in American education in the form of tracking.
Both deeply personal and broadly social, this finely crafted memoir will capture the interest of anyone who cares about the future of education, race relations, feminism, and social justice.
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Information
Table of contents
- Front Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue
- 1. A Jewish Girlhood
- 2. Negotiating Adolescence
- 3. Becoming Educate
- 4. Getting It Right
- 5. Fifteen Minutes
- 6. Our Town
- Epilogue
- Back Cover