Whistling Vivaldi : and other clues to how stereotypes affect us / Claude M. Steele.
2010
K370 .S74 2010 (Mapit)
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Author
Title
Whistling Vivaldi : and other clues to how stereotypes affect us / Claude M. Steele.
Edition
1st ed.
Imprint
New York : W.W. Norton & Company, [2010]
Copyright
©2010
Description
xii, 242 pages ; 22 cm.
Series
Issues of our time (W.W. Norton & Company)
Formatted Contents Note
An introduction : at the root of identity
A mysterious link between identity and intellectual performance
Stereotype threat comes to light, and in more than one group
A broader view of identity : in the lives of Anatole Broyard, Amin Maalouf, and the rest of us
The many experiences of stereotype threat
Identity threat and the efforting life
The mind on stereotype threat : racing and overloaded
The strength of stereotype threat : the role of cues
Reducing identity and stereotype threat : a new hope
The distance between us : the role of identity threat
Conclusion : identity as a bridge between us.
A mysterious link between identity and intellectual performance
Stereotype threat comes to light, and in more than one group
A broader view of identity : in the lives of Anatole Broyard, Amin Maalouf, and the rest of us
The many experiences of stereotype threat
Identity threat and the efforting life
The mind on stereotype threat : racing and overloaded
The strength of stereotype threat : the role of cues
Reducing identity and stereotype threat : a new hope
The distance between us : the role of identity threat
Conclusion : identity as a bridge between us.
Summary
In this work, the author, a social psychologist, addresses one of the most perplexing social issues of our time: the trend of minority underperformance in higher education. With strong evidence showing that the problem involves more than weaker skills, he explores other explanations. Here he presents an insider's look at his research and details his groundbreaking findings on stereotypes and identity, findings that will deeply alter the way we think about ourselves, our abilities, and our relationships with each other. Through dramatic personal stories, he shares the researcher's experience of peering beneath the surface of our ordinary social lives to reveal what it is like to be stereotyped based on our gender, age, race, class, or any of the ways by which we culturally classify one another. What he discovers is that this experience of "stereotype threat" can profoundly affect our functioning: undermining our performance, causing emotional and physiological reactions, and affecting our career and relationship choices. But because these threats, though little recognized, are near-daily and life-shaping for all of us, the shared experience of them can help bring Americans closer together. Always aware of the ways that identity plays out in the lives of real people, his conclusions shed new light on a host of American social phenomena, from the racial gender gaps in test scores to the belief in the superior athletic prowess of black men. In a time of renewed discourse about race and class, this work offers insight into how we form our sense of self, and lays out a plan that will both reduce the negative effects of "stereotype threat" and begin reshaping American identities. -- From book jacket.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 220-230) and index.
Location
STA
Call Number
K370 .S74 2010
Language
English
ISBN
039306249X hardback
9780393062496 hardback
0393339726 paperback
9780393339727 paperback
9780393062496 hardback
0393339726 paperback
9780393339727 paperback
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