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Hysteresis Effects and Emotional Suffering: Chinese Rural Students’ First Encounters With the Urban University

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  • Jiexiu Chen

Abstract

In the Chinese context of a stratified higher education system and significant urban–rural inequality, rural students are generally facing constrained possibilities for social mobility through higher education. Despite these structural constraints, some exceptional rural students, like all the participants in this research, manage to get themselves enrolled in the urban university. Drawing on participants’ subjective narratives about their first encounters in the urban university, I argue that the rural students in this research were confronted with two levels of habitus–field disjunctures, namely, the rural–urban disjuncture and academic disjuncture. Then, through examining participants’ narratives about their hysteresis effects and emotional suffering, I suggest the sense of feeling lost and inferior reveals how various types of domination in the external structure of the field of the urban university play a part in affecting rural students’ inner emotional worlds.

Suggested Citation

  • Jiexiu Chen, 2022. "Hysteresis Effects and Emotional Suffering: Chinese Rural Students’ First Encounters With the Urban University," Sociological Research Online, , vol. 27(1), pages 101-117, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:socres:v:27:y:2022:i:1:p:101-117
    DOI: 10.1177/1360780420949884
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Xiaolei Qian & Russell Smyth, 2008. "Measuring regional inequality of education in China: widening coast-inland gap or widening rural-urban gap?," Journal of International Development, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 20(2), pages 132-144.
    2. Jessica Abrahams & Nicola Ingram, 2013. "The Chameleon Habitus: Exploring Local Students’ Negotiations of Multiple Fields," Sociological Research Online, , vol. 18(4), pages 213-226, November.
    3. Garth Stahl, 2013. "Habitus Disjunctures, Reflexivity and White Working-Class Boys’ Conceptions of Status in Learner and Social Identities," Sociological Research Online, , vol. 18(3), pages 19-30, August.
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