'It was fine if you wanted to leave': Educational ambivalence in a Nova Scotian coastal community 1963-1998
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 10:11authored byMichael Corbett
This article reports on a study of schooling in southwest Nova Scotia. Using Bourdieu’s concepts of cultural capital and habitus, I analyze rural men’s relationships involving identity, work, place, and schooling to explain continuing high male dropout rates and local traditions of ambivalence and resistance to schooling. I conclude that the tension between formal schooling and place is endemic in many rural communities and that qualitative migration analysis can reveal the complexity of relationships between learning and leaving. [rural education, migration, Nova Scotia, school persistence]
History
Publication title
Anthropology and Education Quarterly
Volume
35
Issue
4
Pagination
451-471
ISSN
1548-1492
Department/School
Faculty of Education
Publisher
University of California Press
Place of publication
united States
Rights statement
Copyright 2004 by the American Anthropological Association