We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Confucius or Mozart? Community Cultural Wealth and Upward Mobility Among Children of Chinese Immigrants.
- Authors
Lu, Wei-Ting
- Abstract
Most studies of Chinese upward mobility focus on how immigrant community institutions sustain ethnic culture to foster educational success. In contrast, I analyze how community-based music schools develop a cultural strategy to guide immigrants to pursue enrollment in prestigious colleges by utilizing high cultural capital in classical music. Chinese immigrant families take advantage of information networks in these schools to develop a bonding form of social capital that allows not only middle-class families but also working-class families to redefine the meaning of ethnicity. This is theoretically surprising, because some theory predicts that middle class status is needed to benefit from such cultural capital. Through competence in Western classical music, Asian students signify their well roundedness, an achievement that goes beyond rote learning. Chinese families pursue this musical cultural strategy to incorporate themselves into mainstream educational institutions. Research on the strategic use of nonoppositional musical culture for educational mobility suggests the limitation of segmented assimilation theory.
- Subjects
UNITED States; CULTURAL capital; CHINESE American children; UPWARD mobility (Social sciences); IMMIGRANTS; MUSIC conservatories; SOCIAL capital; MUSIC education; ECONOMIC history; SOCIAL history
- Publication
Qualitative Sociology, 2013, Vol 36, Issue 3, p303
- ISSN
0162-0436
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s11133-013-9251-y