Reproducing Class. Henry Rutz

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Reproducing Class - Henry Rutz

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       REPRODUCING CLASS

       Education, Neoliberalism, and the

       Rise of the New Middle Class in Istanbul

      Henry J. Rutz and Erol M. Balkan

      First published in 2009 by

       Berghahn Books www.berghahnbooks.com

      ©2009, 2010 Henry J. Rutz and Erol M. Balkan

      First paperback edition published in 2010

      First ebook edition published in 2013

      All rights reserved.

      Except for the quotation of short passages

      for the purposes of criticism and review, no part of this book

      may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or

      mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information

      storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented,

      without written permission of the publisher.

       Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Rutz, Henry J.

      Reproducing class: education, neoliberalism, and the rise of the new middle class in Istanbul / Henry J. Rutz and Erol M. Balkan.—1st ed.

      p. cm.

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      ISBN 978-1-84545-562-0 (hbk)—978-1-84545-780-8 (pbk)—978-0-85745-545-1 (ebk)

      1. Middle class—Turkey—History—20th century. I. Balkan, Erol M. II. Title.

      HT684.R88 2009

      305.5'50949618—dc22

      2008047820

      British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 978-1-84545-562-0 Hardback

      ISBN 978-1-84545-780-8 Paperback

      ISBN 978-0-85745-545-1 Ebook

       For DorisFor Neecan, Osman, and Mehmet

       CONTENTS

       Preface

       Acknowledgments

       Introduction

       1. Class Matters

       2. The Neoliberal Landscape

       3. The Making of an Education Hierarchy

       4. Familism

       5. Competition And Cultural Reproduction

       6. Preparing To Win A Place

       7. Testing The Limits Of The New Middle Class

       Appendix A. Istanbul Socioeconomic Household Survey, 1993

       Appendix B. Interviews, 1996

       Bibliography

       Index

      PREFACE

      One of the most salient social phenomena of our times is the rise of global cities and the associated remaking of national middle classes into global new middle classes as a consequence of economic globalization through global corporations that are restructuring welfare states and making them into neoliberal states. Much has already been written about economic differentiation within the middle class as a result of deregulation of national markets and the unprecedented changes taking place in work and family life. Less well documented but equally salient for class formation is the effect of global processes on the changing culture of the urban middle class. And one of the most salient aspects of middle class social reproduction, old or new, is quality education as a path to occupation destinations and a cultural ideology of consumption that reinvents what it means to live “a comfortable life.” This urban ethnography of middle class formation through selective education is a contribution to the larger project of the comparative study of elite education and formation of middle classes in this era of globalization. It comes at a time when the value of testing in the context of human capital development and the increasing option of privatized alternatives to public education are being aired in newspapers and on television and when families are seeking alternative forms of schooling for their children.

      While the relationship between the new middle class and selective education in world cities is everywhere becoming more apparent, the dynamics of class formation by means of selective education remain particular to state formation, national economic policies, family formation, local cultures, and national education systems.1 This book is an ethnographic account of those dynamics as expressed in the struggle of middle-class families in Istanbul to provide their children with quality education during a period of transition during an early phase of global integration. Its internal logic turns on families' perception that for their eleven-year-old children to have a comfortable life, they must win the national state-directed Selective Middle Schools Examinations (SMSEs). The odds that they will fail are daunting and at times overwhelming. The result is a social drama in which wives act

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