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E-book
Author Ramos-Zayas, Ana Y., author.

Title Parenting empires : class, whiteness, and the moral economy of privilege in Latin America / Ana Y. Ramos-Zayas
Published Durham : Duke University Press, 2020

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Description 1 online resource (xiii, 282 pages)
Contents Parenting empires and the moral economy of privilege in Brazil and Puerto Rico -- The feel of Ipanema : social history and structure of feeling in Rio de Janeiro -- Parenting El Condado : social history and immaterial materiality in San Juan -- Whiteness from within : elite interiority, personhood, and parenthood -- Schooling whiteness : adult friendships, social ease, and the privilege of choosing race -- The extended family : intimate hierarchies and ancestral imaginaries -- Affective inequalities : childcare workers and elite consumptions of blackness
Summary "PARENTING EMPIRES is a comparative ethnography of wealthy white parents in two Latin American residential neighborhoods -- Ipanema, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; and El Condado, in San Juan, Puerto Rico -- located within two of the world's most unequal 'nations.' Although on the surface elite parents in these neighborhoods appear to be concerned with cultivating a multicultural cosmopolitanism, Ana Ramos-Zayas reveals how their parenting strategies, which employ spirituality, therapeutic language, and emphasize emotional intelligence and equality, allow them to preserve their white privilege. She defines this moral economy that maintains class and racial inequality by promoting psycho-social development as 'sovereign parenting.' In this way, Ramos-Zayas sheds light on the diverse layers of power and influence that elites hold in the Global South and how they ultimately remain complicit with rather than challenge broader nation-state projects that sustain racial hierarchies. After an introduction which charts the book's conceptual frameworks, chapters 2 and 3 explore the history, built environment, and political economy of both Ipanema and El Condado. For each of the two neighborhoods, Ramos-Zayas identifies places where parents come together across ethnoracial, class, and regional lines-what she calls 'child-centered nodules of urbanism.' Chapters 4 and 5 examine interiority capital, or the cultivation of psychological depth, emotional vocabularies, and spiritual formations among the elite and their parenting strategies. The final three chapters reveal how sovereign parenting fosters a moral framework for wealth in a context of extreme inequity. Through this framework, elites position themselves in relation to ethno-racial and regional Others, while also translating neoliberal state politics into austerity subjectivities. This book will be of interest to students and scholars in sociology, urban studies, critical ethnic studies, and Latin American studies"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on March 18, 2020)
Subject Parents, White -- Brazil -- Rio de Janeiro
Parents, White -- Puerto Rico -- San Juan
Parenting -- Brazil -- Rio de Janeiro
Parenting -- Puerto Rico -- San Juan
Elite (Social sciences) -- Brazil -- Rio de Janeiro
Elite (Social sciences) -- Puerto Rico -- San Juan
White people -- Race identity -- Brazil -- Rio de Janeiro
White people -- Race identity -- Puerto Rico -- San Juan
Privilege (Social psychology) -- Brazil -- Rio de Janeiro
Privilege (Social psychology) -- Puerto Rico -- San Juan
Wealth -- Moral and ethical aspects -- Brazil -- Rio de Janeiro
Wealth -- Moral and ethical aspects -- Puerto Rico -- San Juan
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural.
Elite (Social sciences)
Parenting
Parents, White
Privilege (Social psychology)
Social conditions
Wealth -- Moral and ethical aspects
White people -- Race identity
SUBJECT Ipanema (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) -- Social conditions
San Juan (P.R.) -- Social conditions
Subject Brazil -- Rio de Janeiro
Brazil -- Rio de Janeiro -- Ipanema
Puerto Rico -- San Juan
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2019034192
ISBN 147800925X
9781478009252