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Connolly, P. (2000) Racism and young girls’
peer-group relations: The experiences of South Asian girls, Sociology,
34(3): 499-519.
This article draws upon data from an indepth ethnographic study
of five- and six-year-old children in an English multi-ethnic, inner
city primary school. It focuses on the significance of ‘race’
within young girls’ peer group relations and the ways in which
the social dynamics that underlie those relations provide the context
for understanding the particular nature and form that racism takes
among the girls. This is done through a focus on the experiences
of South Asian girls within the group. Within this, the article
has two main aims. First, it aims to contribute to the literature
within the sociology of education by extending the existing research
focus on racism within teacher/pupil interactions to include an
understanding of racism as it manifests itself among the children’s
peer-group relations. Second, in adapting and applying Pierre Boudieu’s
concepts of capital and field, the article also offers a contribution
to the literature within the sociology of ‘race’ and
ethnicity by suggesting one potentially fruitful way in which racism
can be understood within specific social contexts.
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