161 research outputs found
Student-Parent attitudes towards Filipino migrant teachers in Indonesia
Using ethnographic data gleaned from a foreign managed Christian school in Indonesia, this article situates the ethnic prejudices of Indonesian Chinese parents and students towards Filipino teachers within the organizational and cultural politics of private schooling. It is argued that the commoditization of education as a form of market consumption alongside the masculinized international curriculum help shape the feminization of teachers from the Philippines. Catering to the aspirations of the countryâs minority ethnic Chinese, privately managed schools actively recruit trained teachers from the Philippines, many of whom are female and are perceived by students and their parents as exhibiting negative symbolic capital. In the process of their employment, they encounter occasional moments of less than complete success and challenges in their jobs. This article situates this prejudice within the cultural politics of masculinized Chinese schooling in Indonesia, while seeking to shed light on the role of Filipino work migrancy in Indonesiaâs formal employment sector
The Menopause Taboo at Work: Examining Womenâs Embodied Experiences of Menopause in the UK Police Service
This article contributes to the growing body of knowledge about gendered ageing at work through an examination of the embodied experiences of women undergoing menopause transition in the UK police service. Drawing on 1197 survey responses, providing both quantitative and qualitative data gathered across three police forces in 2017â18, the findings highlight the importance of a material-discursive approach that considers contextual influences on womenâs bodily experiences. The article evidences gendered ageism and the penalty suffered by women whose ageing bodies fail to comply with an ideal worker norm. It makes an important contribution both to theorising embodiment, drawing in age as well as gender discourses, and to promoting a material-discursive approach that recognises the materiality of the body while also offering the potential for agency, reflection and resistance
Classtalk: A Classroom Communication System for Active Learning
This pdf file is an article describing the advantages of using Classtalk technology in the classroom to enhance classroom communication. Classtalk technology cab facilitate the presentation of questions for small group work, collec the student answers and then display histograms showing how the class answered. This new communication technology can help instructors create a more interactive, student centered classroom, especially when teaching large courses. The article describes Classtalk as a very useful tool not only for engaging students in active learning, but also for enhancing the overall communication within the classroom. This article is a selection from the electronic Journal for Computing in Higher Education. Educational levels: Graduate or professional
Punk is just a state of mind: Exploring what punk means to older punk women
What does punk mean to older punk women? And how are such understandings interwoven with experiences of ageing and gender? The complexity in defining punk has been noted and it has been suggested that this complexity in part results from punkâs dislike of being labelled/categorised. Drawing upon interviews with 22 self-identifying older punk women, this article considers how they conceived punk as âa state of mindâ, exploring the four shared punk values seen to comprise this: DIY, subversion, political consciousness and community. An unpacking of these values in terms of what they might âlook likeâ and how they are put into action by the women highlights the considerable roles ageing and gender play
Reconstructing retirement as an enterprising endeavour
This article explores issues of age and enterprise in later life as manifested in tensions between retiree and entrepreneurial identities. We utilise the concept of a discursive event to examine time-bound online data, specifically media texts and reader comments associated with the online news coverage on of an insurance company report. This report introduced the label Weary to describe âworking entrepreneurial and active retireesâ. Our analysis shows how keeping healthy and active are constructed as insufficient markers of a productive and successful older age. These markers are supplanted by a neoliberal discourse which prioritises enterprise and economic productivity in retirement. However, the Weary subject position has implications within this discourse which constrain the valued contribution of older adults to productive work yet deny access to this group to entrepreneurial endeavours. This highlights the de-stabilization of retirement and critical tensions in its discursive reconceptualization as a period of entrepreneurial endeavour
âWriting Nowâ
This chapter considers the themes and forms that characterise womenâs writing in the new millennium. Post-9/11, self-representation has become a particularly urgent task for Muslim writers such as Monica Ali and Leila Aboulela. A concern with refugees, asylum seekers, and modern forms of slavery becomes increasingly prominent, not only in fiction â for example, Fadia Faqirâs My Name is Salma (2007) and Monica Aliâs In the Kitchen (2009) â but also in the theatre: Kay Adsheadâs The Bogus Woman (2000), Sonja Lindenâs Crocodile Seeking Refuge (2005), Christine Baconâs Rendition Monologues (2008), Rukhsana Ahmad and Oladipo Agboluajeâs Footprints in the Sand (2008), Natasha Walter's Motherland (2008), and Gbemisola Ikumeloâs Next Door (2010). The impact of global capitalism, consumerism, and branding are explored in novels such as Scarlett Thomasâ Popco (2004), Ali Smithâs Girl Meets Boy (2007), and Wintersonâs The Stone Gods (2007). Ageing is another major theme. Long a pre-occupation of Doris Lessing, it features also in Liz Jensenâs War Crimes for the Home (2002) and Alison Fellâs Tricks of the Light (2003). Anxieties about climate change and environmental apocalypse are addressed through dystopia in Maggie Geeâs The Ice People (1998) and The Flood (2004), Jeanette Wintersonâs The Stone Gods (2007), Sarah Hallâs The Carhullen Army (2007), and Liz Jensenâs The Rapture (2009). Following Suniti Namjoshiâs pioneeringly collaborative Building Babel (1996), the use of multimedia in Maya Chowdhryâs digital poetry, Kate Pullingerâs ânetworkedâ wikinovel Flight Paths (2005-), and the âvisual novelâ (an interactive fiction game), gives literature an entirely new shape
âOlder-wiser-lesbiansâ and âbaby-dykesâ: mediating age and generation in New Queer Cinema
Representations of intersections of gender, age, and sexuality can reveal deep-rooted cultural anxieties about older women and sexuality. Images of lesbian ageing are of particular interest in terms of alterity, as the old/er queer woman can combine layers of othernessânot only is she the cultural âotherâ within heteronormativity, but she can also appear as the opposite of popular cultureâs lesbian chic. In this article, a cultural analysis of a range of filmsâIf These Walls Could Talk 2 (dir. Anderson, Coolidge, and Heche 2000), Itty Bitty Titty Committee (dir. Babbit 2007), The Owls (dir. Dunye 2010), Hannah Free (dir. Carlton 2009), and Cloudburst (dir. Fitzgerald 2011)âconsiders diverse dramatisations of lesbian generations. This article interrogates to what extent alternative cinemas deconstruct normative conceptualisations of ageing. Drawing on recent critiques of post-feminist culture, and a range of feminist and age/ing studies scholarship, it suggests that a linear understanding of ageing and the generational underlies dominant depictions of oppositional binaries of young versus old, of generational segregation or rivalry, and the othering of age. It concludes that non-linear understandings of temporality and ageing contain the potential for New Queer Cinema to counteract such idealisations of youthfulness, which, it argues, is one of the most deep-rooted manifestations of (hetero)normativity
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