public education: a route into lebanon’s middle class in the 1960s and early 1970s
Clicks: 149
ID: 130758
2014
In Lebanon during the 1960s, public education became more accessible to members of the lower classes and different sectarian denominations, after a time when education had been, to a large extent, a privilege of upper- and middle-class Christians. This paper examines the socioeconomic conditions of public school teachers as a result of this process. Using Bourdieusian analysis, I argue that these teachers used cultural capital acquired through free education to become part of a rising professional middle class. To a large extent, these teachers’ definition of their own social positions and roles was a result of their individual histories and internalized values.
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zbib2014middlepublic
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Authors | ;Youssef Zbib |
Journal | middle east : topics & arguments |
Year | 2014 |
DOI | DOI not found |
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