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Papers by Katerina Tucker
The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, Jan 1, 1940
College students at Princeton reject both the labels of fascism and communism, the latter carryin... more College students at Princeton reject both the labels of fascism and communism, the latter carrying the greater stigma. Knowledge of fascism or communism bears little relation to intensity of opposition. The majority of students feel that the two systems are good for the countries in which they are found. Opposition to the labels of communism and fascism does not extend
This review critically explores media representations of working class people and working class l... more This review critically explores media representations of working class people and working class lives. Drawing on various studies, as well as other examples from different forms of media, it argues firstly that there is prevalence of derogatory images which undermine the emergence of valued independent working class identities. However, attention is also given to some -albeit exceptional -more contradictory representations which may indicate more progressive lines of development. One particular common stereotype which is highlighted is that of working class people"s consciousness lacking potential for development except at the price of losing their working-classness. This, it is argued, is encouraged by the more general commonsense division between workers and thinkers, one which in fact goes against rich traditions of working class self-education. After discussing the educational implications of these observations, the review shifts to consider a recently intensified tendency in the media for "defending", specifically, the white working class as an oppressed ethnic group. Different examples of this phenomenon are discussed in the light of alternative perspectives based on historical insights into the possibility for transcending divisions within the working class. In this way the emphasis on white working class particularism is seen to be in danger of reintroducing assumptions of working class stasis and of crippling efforts -including in educational settings -to tackle racist viewpoints.
The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, Jan 1, 1940
College students at Princeton reject both the labels of fascism and communism, the latter carryin... more College students at Princeton reject both the labels of fascism and communism, the latter carrying the greater stigma. Knowledge of fascism or communism bears little relation to intensity of opposition. The majority of students feel that the two systems are good for the countries in which they are found. Opposition to the labels of communism and fascism does not extend
This review critically explores media representations of working class people and working class l... more This review critically explores media representations of working class people and working class lives. Drawing on various studies, as well as other examples from different forms of media, it argues firstly that there is prevalence of derogatory images which undermine the emergence of valued independent working class identities. However, attention is also given to some -albeit exceptional -more contradictory representations which may indicate more progressive lines of development. One particular common stereotype which is highlighted is that of working class people"s consciousness lacking potential for development except at the price of losing their working-classness. This, it is argued, is encouraged by the more general commonsense division between workers and thinkers, one which in fact goes against rich traditions of working class self-education. After discussing the educational implications of these observations, the review shifts to consider a recently intensified tendency in the media for "defending", specifically, the white working class as an oppressed ethnic group. Different examples of this phenomenon are discussed in the light of alternative perspectives based on historical insights into the possibility for transcending divisions within the working class. In this way the emphasis on white working class particularism is seen to be in danger of reintroducing assumptions of working class stasis and of crippling efforts -including in educational settings -to tackle racist viewpoints.