Learning Capitalist Culture: Deep in the Heart of Tejas

Front Cover
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1990 - Education - 247 pages

Learning Capitalist Culture presents an ethnographic study of a small, economically-depressed, predominantly Mexican American south Texas town. Like many communities in the Southwest, North Town has undergone cultural and political change since the late sixties, when the Chicano civil rights movement emerged and challenged the segregated racial order.

This book examines the way in which the youth of North Town learn traditional American values through participation in sports, membership in formal and informal social groups, dating, and interactions with teachers in the classroom. Using information gathered over fourteen years of field work, Douglas E. Foley shows how the rituals involved in these activities tend to preserve or reproduce class and gender inequalities, even as Mexicanos transform the racial order.

 

Contents

The Civil Rights Movement Comes to Town
1
The Great American Football Ritual
28
Finding an Identity in the Social Status Scene
63
Working and Playing Around in the Classroom
101
An Epilogue
135
Appendix A A Performance Theory of Cultural Reproduction
159
Schools
188
Concluding Remarks and a Response to the Foreword
195
Appendix B Field Methods Narrative Style and Hermeneutic
206
Data Tables
232
Index
244
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1990)

Douglas E. Foley is Associate Professor of Anthropology and of Education at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author of From Peones to Politicos: Class and Ethnicity in a South Texas Town, 1900-1987, and The Heartland Chronicles, which is also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press.