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Time Inheritors: How Time Inequalities Shape Higher Education Mobility in China [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x152x17 mm, 1 Figures
  • Serija: SUNY series, Education in Global Perspectives
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Oct-2025
  • Leidėjas: State University of New York Press
  • ISBN-13: 9798855801910
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x152x17 mm, 1 Figures
  • Serija: SUNY series, Education in Global Perspectives
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Oct-2025
  • Leidėjas: State University of New York Press
  • ISBN-13: 9798855801910
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Reveals the role of time in reproducing inequalities as students navigate rural-to-urban, cross-border, and transnational higher education.

Can a student inherit time? What difference does time make to their educational journeys and outcomes? The Time Inheritors draws on nearly a decade of field research with more than one hundred youth in China to argue that intergenerational transfers of privilege or deprivation are manifested in and through time. Comparing experiences of rural-to-urban, cross-border, and transnational education, Cora Lingling Xu shows how inequalities in time inheritance help drive deeply unequal mobility. With its unique focus on time, nuanced comparative analysis, and sensitive ethnographic engagement, The Time Inheritors opens new avenues for understanding the social mechanisms shaping the future of China and the world.

Recenzijos

"Xu's conceptually sophisticated monograph reveals how intersectional inequalities are constructed, experienced, and transmitted temporally, with special reference to education. Through the vivid stories of students in mainland China and Hong Kong, and Chinese international students, Xu brings to life different individuals' 'time inheritances,' demonstrating the exciting possibilities time offers as a lens for innovative thinking about inequality. A must-read for sociologists and anthropologists of education, China, and time." Rachel Murphy, author of The Children of China's Great Migration

"Innovative and ambitious, The Time Inheritors proposes a time-centric framework that brings together analyses of social structure, history, individual behavior, and affect. We often feel we are fighting for time. But, as Cora Xu argues in this important study of Chinese students, the scarcity of time is not a given or universal. Different experiences of time result in part from the varying amounts of time we inherit from the previous generation. Time inheritance is therefore critical to the reproduction of social inequality." Biao Xiang, coauthor of Self as Method: Thinking through China and the World

"Cora Lingling Xu offers a groundbreaking analysis of educational inequality and social mobility in contemporary China. Xu centers the voices of marginalized students throughout, providing poignant insights into their lived experiences of rural poverty, urban precarity, and educational alienation. At the same time, Xu's comparative scope reveals how even seemingly privileged groups can be constrained by the temporal logics of social reproduction. The Time Inheritors is a must-read for scholars, educators, and policymakers concerned with educational equity and social justice. Xu's lucid prose and engaging case studies make the book accessible to a wide audience while her cutting-edge theoretical framework and methodological rigor set a new standard for research on education and inequality." Chris R. Glass, coeditor of Critical Perspectives on Equity and Social Mobility in Study Abroad: Interrogating Issues of Unequal Access and Outcomes

"By centering the temporal dimension of who is advantaged or disadvantaged, how, why, and with what consequences, The Time Inheritors takes a unique and powerful approach. Not only does the book contribute theoretically and empirically to our understanding of class inequalities but it also resonates deeply. The inclusion of Chinese translations and characters will give Chinese readers a rich, nuanced cultural appreciation of her findings." Dan Cui, author of Identity and Belonging among Chinese Canadian Youth: Racialized Habitus in School, Family, and Media

"An extremely well-written, theoretically informed, and compelling volume that represents a major contribution to the study of education, migration, and social inequality in China and beyond. The Time Inheritors proposes a bold and innovative frameworkthat of time inheritanceto open the black box of social inequality's temporal dimension. Whereas the relatively privileged classes inherit temporal wealth and strategies that enable them to bank and save time, facilitating their mobility, the time poor lack this inheritance, forcing them into a vicious cycle of wasting time and paying back temporal debts. Drawing from a rich palette of vivid and intimate longitudinal case studies, The Time Inheritors unpacks the complex intersections between familial, national, and global time inequalities." Zachary M. Howlett, author of Meritocracy and Its Discontents: Anxiety and the National College Entrance Exam in China

Daugiau informacijos

Reveals the role of time in reproducing inequalities as students navigate rural-to-urban, cross-border, and transnational higher education.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction: The Significance of Inherited Time

List of Acronyms

Presentation Style

Part I: Theorization of Time Inheritance and Education Mobility

1. Time Inheritance, Banked Time, and Borrowed Time

2. Education as Debt Accumulation or Entitlement

3. Education Mobility as Fate Changing

Part II: How Time Inheritance Reproduces Inequalities

4. Visions of Decisions: From Self-Sabotage to Path Paving

5. Time-Shaped Dispositions: From Debt-Paying Mentality to Sense of
Entitlement

6. Time-Induced Consequences: From "Squandering" Labor Time to Achieving
Work-life Balance

7. Time Use: From Wasted Time to Gained Time

8. Shades of Career: From Being Trapped in Precarity to Making Bold Career
Moves

Summary of Part II: Observed Mechanisms of Inequality Reproduction Through
Time Inheritance

Part III: How Time Inheritance Transforms Inequalities

9. Not a Mechanistic Determinism: From Unqualified Inheritors to Zealous
Parvenus

10. City-Bound Time Inequalities

11. Political Time: Different Inheritances, Similar Prices

Summary of Part III

Conclusion: Moving Beyond Bourdieu: A Road Map for Global Time Inheritance
Research

Appendix: Participant Profiles

Notes
References
Index
Cora Lingling Xu is Associate Professor in Sociology of Education at Durham University, United Kingdom.