Celebrity, Aspiration and Contemporary Youth: Education and Inequality in an Era of Austerity

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کتاب سلبریتی ها، آرزوها و جوانان معاصر: آموزش و نابرابری در عصر ریاضت نسخه زبان اصلی

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Celebrity, Aspiration and Contemporary Youth: Education and Inequality in an Era of Austerity

نام کتاب : Celebrity, Aspiration and Contemporary Youth: Education and Inequality in an Era of Austerity
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : سلبریتی ها، آرزوها و جوانان معاصر: آموزش و نابرابری در عصر ریاضت
سری :
نویسندگان : , , ,
ناشر : Bloomsbury Academic
سال نشر : 2018
تعداد صفحات : 211
ISBN (شابک) : 9781474294201 , 9781474294218
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 31 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Cover\nHalf Title\nSeries\nTitle\nCopyright\nContents\nIllustration\nAcknowledgements\n1 Introduction\n Aspiration, education and meritocracy\n Youth in a post-crash landscape: A lost generation?\n Making sense of austere meritocracy: Just neoliberalism as we know it?\n Turning to celebrity\n Introducing the study\n Outline of the book\n2 Youth\n ‘You get all these like accusations’: Negotiating the discourse of problem youth\n ‘There’s a lot depending on us’: Bearing the burden of hope in austere meritocracy\n ‘Off-the-rails’ child stars and ‘exceptional’ role models: Negotiating youth through celebrity talk\n Conclusion\n3 Work\n ‘I know if I work hard, I can do anything I want to do’: The centrality of work to aspiration\n Obama shows us that ‘we can get everything we want if we try hard’: Hard work and celebrity talk\n ‘What did she do to get famous?’ Class, gender, race and the uneven ascription of hard work\n ‘I don’t think you can judge people’: Struggles over hard work\n Conclusion\n4 Authenticity\n ‘I can’t really remember like a day where I decided I wanted to do it’: Career pathways as self-realization\n ‘she had faith in what she’d done, and she believed it could go somewhere, and it did’: Celebrity, authenticity and making it a\n ‘Fake means that they’re literally not themselves, like some of their body parts just aren’t real’: Class, gender, race and ina\n ‘You should have another role model’: Clashes between authenticity and aspiration\n Conclusion\n5 Success\n ‘He’s really successful because of what he created’: The entrepreneurialism success discourse\n ‘We’re not people who can fly’: Negotiating the entrepreneurial success discourse\n ‘A good and steady life’: The stability success discourse\n ‘Maybe the best I can isn’t what I want to do’: Hedonism and resisting success\n ‘My granddad’s a welder. . . . He’s quite a successful man’: Manual labour and resisting ‘success’\n Conclusion\n6 Happiness\n ‘I think Will Smith is happy because I’ve seen his family’: Happy families and happy celebrities\n ‘When she was pregnant, she released an album as well’: Happy careers and happy celebrities\n ‘She’s strong-minded, she knows what she wants’: Feminist happiness and unhappy celebrities\n ‘It might be difficult to achieve your dreams if you don’t have any’: Letting (un)happiness happen\n Conclusion\n7 Money\n ‘I think no matter how much I don’t want to say, money is a big part of it’: Managing the contradictions of money in austere me\n ‘I think money destroys them really’: Celebrity consumption and illegitimate wealth\n ‘She doesn’t flaunt her money around’: Thrift, ordinariness and legitimate wealth\n ‘Every year he gives like a 100 million to charity’: Legitimate wealth, entrepreneurship and philanthropy\n Conclusion\n8 Fame\n ‘If you’ve done something amazing, you have the right to be there’: Deserved success and the right kind of fame\n ‘I wouldn’t like to be overly famous, like just if people knew who I was that’s just enough’: Young people aspiring to fame\n ‘They’re self-made . . . they’ve done it all themselves’: YouTubers, new worker subjectivities and contemporary capitalism\n Conclusion\n9 Conclusions\n What have we have learned from this study?\n How can we use this book?\n Where are we right now?\nPostscript\nBibliography\nIndex




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