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(ZT) College the Great Unequalizer
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(ZT) College the Great Unequalizer# Parenting - 为人父母
m*o
1
NYT上的书评,最近左派思想好像很流行。
College, the Great Unequalizer
By Ross Douthat
NO doubt by now you’ve finished last month’s assigned reading, Thomas
Piketty’s “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” for our spring-semester
course on Stratification in America. I’m sorry about the length (and the
Amazon back-order problem), but I’m sure that the 696 pages of inheritance-
data analysis and émile Zola references flew by. And the good news is that
you don’t need to worry about the term paper, because my fellow Elite Media
Pundits and I have written about 330,000 words on the book that you can
just crib, copy and repurpose.
The other good news is that your next assignment is much shorter — only 344
pages this time. Also, it’s possibly a little sexier than Piketty (his
shirt-unbuttoned photos notwithstanding), with fewer equations and a little
more human interest.
The title is “Paying for the Party,” and the subtitle is “How College
Maintains Inequality.” (I can tell, you’re waking up already.) The authors
, Elizabeth A. Armstrong and Laura T. Hamilton, and a team of researchers
embedded themselves in a freshman dormitory at an unnamed high-profile
Midwestern state school and then kept up with a group of female students
through college and into graduate or professional life.
Their project, as conceived, was supposed to be about sex and romance. In
the end, though, it turned out to be mostly about class.
That’s because what the authors discovered were the many ways in which
collegiate social life, as embraced by students and blessed by the
university, works to disadvantage young women (and no doubt young men, too)
who need their education to be something other than a four-year-long spree.
Instead of being a great equalizer, “Paying for the Party” argues, the
American way of college rewards those who come not just academically but
socially prepared, while treating working-class students more cruelly, and
often leaving them adrift.
Much of this treatment is meted out through the power of the campus party
scene, the boozy, hook-up-happy world of Greek life. This “party pathway,”
the authors write, is “a main artery through the university,” and its
allure is the reason many affluent out-of-state enrollees choose the
university in question in the first place.
Such party-pathway students aren’t particularly motivated academically, but
because they have well-off parents and clear-enough career goals they don’
t necessarily need to be, and because they don’t require much financial aid
they’re crucial to the university’s bottom line. (Their college careers,
the authors write, depend on “an implicit agreement between the university
and students to demand little of each other.”)
The party pathway’s influence, though, is potentially devastating for less
well-heeled students. Some, dubbed “wannabes” in the book, are pulled into
a social whirl that undercuts their practical aspirations — encouraging
them to change majors (from elementary education to sports broadcasting, say
) to imitate their cooler peers, pushing them into sexual situations they
don’t know how to navigate, forcing their parents “to dig deep” for “
sorority fees, spring break trips and bar tabs” and saddling them with
large postcollegiate debts.
Others, who can’t keep up socially or fit in at all, simply end up isolated
and persistently unhappy. (Over all, the most successful working-class
students were those who transferred to less-prestigious schools instead of
staying at the State U.)
Since you’re fresh off reading Piketty, you’ll probably see some of his
left-wing analysis of class stratification illustrated in this story. The
party pathway is designed for the daughters of both the 1 percent and of
what Piketty calls the “petits rentiers” — families that are affluent but
not exorbitantly rich. And its impact on student fortunes vividly
demonstrates how inherited capital can reproduce and ratify privilege, even
in an institution notionally devoted to democratic virtues and the common
good.
But this reading assignment, unlike “Capital,” gets at a point about class
hierarchies that social conservatives are more likely to appreciate. “
Paying for the Party” is also a story about the socioeconomic consequences
of cultural permissiveness — about what happens, who wins and who loses,
when a youth culture in which the only (official) moral rule is consent
meets a corporate-academic university establishment that has deliberately
retreated from any moralistic, disciplinary role.
The losers are students ill equipped for the experiments in youthful
dissipation that are now accepted as every well-educated millennial’s
natural birthright. The winners, meanwhile, are living proof of how a
certain kind of libertinism can be not only an expression of class privilege
, but even a weapon of class warfare.
By this I mean that an upper class that practices and models bourgeois
virtues — not only thrift and diligence but chastity and sobriety — will
be more permeable, less self-protected and self-perpetuating, than an upper
class that tells the aspirational that they can’t climb the ladder unless
they join the party first.
Especially if no one mentions, until the tab comes due, that they’ll be the
only ones who really pay for it.
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m*o
2
一些读者评论很值得看。
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