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Chapter 29 - Touchstones and Sightings

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 February 2025

Frank Kessel
Affiliation:
University of New Mexico
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Summary

This autobiographical fragment begins in a working-class high school and traces a career trajectory shaped by the world I grew up in and the world I entered. As a White woman from an American working-class background, I was an uneasy fit for the academy, circa 1979. I experienced obstacles and intellectual pleasures. I found many fascinating topics to study (e.g., class and cultural variation in early narrative) and many fascinating colleagues and students to work with. The outsider/insider position I occupied offered novel vantage points on the what, who, and how of developmental inquiry and on its telling omissions. My story of marginalization intersected with a historical moment when developmental psychology began to reckon with its narrowness and ethnocentrism. Thanks to the efforts of many developmental scholars, the field is now headed in a more context-sensitive and pluralistic direction while still contending with entrenched deficit discourses and other blind spots.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pillars of Developmental Psychology
Recollections and Reflections
, pp. 327 - 336
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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References

Suggested Reading

Goodnow, J. J., Miller, P. J., & Kessel, F. (Eds.). (1995). Cultural Practices as Contexts for Development. New Directions for Child Development, No. 67. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Miller, P. J. (1982). Amy, Wendy, and Beth: Learning Language in South Baltimore. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Miller, P. J. & Cho, G. E. (2018). Self-Esteem in Time and Place: How American Families Imagine, Enact, and Personalize a Cultural Ideal. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Miller, P. J., Cho, G. E., & Bracey, J. (2005). Working-class children’s experience through the prism of personal storytelling. Human Development, 48(3) 115135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, P. J., Fung, H., Lin, S., Chen, E. C.-H., & Boldt, B. R. (2012). How socialization happens on the ground: Narrative practices as alternate socializing pathways in Taiwanese and European-American families. Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 77(1, Serial No. 302). Boston: Wiley- Blackwell.Google Scholar
Rosengren, K. S., Miller, P. J., Gutiérrez, I. T., Chow, P. I., Schein, S. S., & Anderson, K. N. (2014). Children’s understanding of death: Toward a contextualized and integrated account. Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 79(1, Serial No. 312). Boston: Wiley: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Sperry, D. E., Sperry, L. L., & Miller, P. J. (2019). Reexamining the verbal environments of children from different socioeconomic backgrounds. Child Development, 90(4), 13031318. https://doi.org.10.1111/cdev.13072.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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