Concerted cultivation as a racial parenting strategy: race, ethnicity and middle-class Indian parents in Britain
Concerted cultivation as a racial parenting strategy: race, ethnicity and middle-class Indian parents in Britain
Studies have highlighted the growing phenomenon of ‘concerted cultivation’ wherein middle-class parents are enrolling their children into multiple paid-for organised leisure activities as a way of cultivating their skills and reproducing class advantage. In unpacking the class disparities in children’s organised leisure participation, researchers have largely overlooked the way race and ethnicity inflect middle-class parents’ concerted cultivation strategies. Drawing upon a qualitative study with Greater London-based professional middle-class British Indian parents, this paper argues that the time-spaces of concerted cultivation also serve as sites for British Indian children’s ethnic and racial socialisation (ERS). Two axes are identified along which racial parenting strategies intersect with concerted cultivation practices in these families: ‘cultural (re)production through organised leisure’ and ‘(anti)racism and leisure’. By analysing these processes, we draw out the implications of this interplay between class and race for understanding middle-class parenting and educational strategies in minority ethnic contexts.
Mukherjee, Utsa
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Barn, Ravinder
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Mukherjee, Utsa
64791e74-3357-474c-9ec2-32c7e4effc3e
Barn, Ravinder
bc604ce4-b8c7-4953-8876-47610a652774
Mukherjee, Utsa and Barn, Ravinder
(2021)
Concerted cultivation as a racial parenting strategy: race, ethnicity and middle-class Indian parents in Britain.
British Journal of Sociology of Education, 42 (4).
(doi:10.1080/01425692.2021.1872365).
Abstract
Studies have highlighted the growing phenomenon of ‘concerted cultivation’ wherein middle-class parents are enrolling their children into multiple paid-for organised leisure activities as a way of cultivating their skills and reproducing class advantage. In unpacking the class disparities in children’s organised leisure participation, researchers have largely overlooked the way race and ethnicity inflect middle-class parents’ concerted cultivation strategies. Drawing upon a qualitative study with Greater London-based professional middle-class British Indian parents, this paper argues that the time-spaces of concerted cultivation also serve as sites for British Indian children’s ethnic and racial socialisation (ERS). Two axes are identified along which racial parenting strategies intersect with concerted cultivation practices in these families: ‘cultural (re)production through organised leisure’ and ‘(anti)racism and leisure’. By analysing these processes, we draw out the implications of this interplay between class and race for understanding middle-class parenting and educational strategies in minority ethnic contexts.
Text
Accepted Manuscript Mukherjee and Barn
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 8 December 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 September 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 445930
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/445930
ISSN: 0142-5692
PURE UUID: dad5308d-a23f-43a0-a80d-6c228008291b
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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2021 19:14
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:12
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Author:
Utsa Mukherjee
Author:
Ravinder Barn
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