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Researching elite education: affectively inferred belongings,desires and exclusions
Authors:Claire Maxwell  Peter Aggleton
Institution:1. Department of Education, Practice and Society, UCL Institute of Education, University College London, London, UKc.maxwell@ioe.ac.uk;3. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Centre for Social Research in Health, UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia
Abstract:This paper reflects on key moments occurring during the course of a three-year study of elite girls’ education, with a focus on the power relations that emerged between researchers and elites within the context in which the study was conducted. Central to our analysis is a focus on the affective dimensions of interaction between the researcher and study participants. Our experience gaining access to elite schools in the study illustrates how productive relationships may be fostered by a demonstrated alignment of interests; the desire for intellectual dialogue; and factors linked to the dynamics of the local education market. In our interviews with elite young women, we found that experiences of affinity, foreignness or awe within the interview process triggered different systems of affect. These moments are significant in shaping understandings of the social projects pursued by elite subjects.
Keywords:elite education  reflexivity  research access  affective relations
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