The Intimate University: Korean American Students and Segregation Issues - Exploring Campus Diversity & Social Challenges in US Higher Education
The Intimate University: Korean American Students and Segregation Issues - Exploring Campus Diversity & Social Challenges in US Higher EducationThe Intimate University: Korean American Students and Segregation Issues - Exploring Campus Diversity & Social Challenges in US Higher EducationThe Intimate University: Korean American Students and Segregation Issues - Exploring Campus Diversity & Social Challenges in US Higher Education

The Intimate University: Korean American Students and Segregation Issues - Exploring Campus Diversity & Social Challenges in US Higher Education

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The majority of the 30,000-plus undergraduates at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign—including the large population of Korean American students—come from nearby metropolitan Chicago. Among the campus’s largest non-white ethnicities, Korean American students arrive at college hoping to realize the liberal ideals of the modern American university, in which individuals can exit their comfort zones to realize their full potential regardless of race, nation, or religion. However, these ideals are compromised by their experiences of racial segregation and stereotypes, including images of instrumental striving that set Asian Americans apart. In The Intimate University, Nancy Abelmann explores the tensions between liberal ideals and the particularities of race, family, and community in the contemporary university. Drawing on ten years of ethnographic research with Korean American students at the University of Illinois and closely following multiple generations of a single extended Korean American family in the Chicago metropolitan area, Abelmann investigates the complexity of racial politics at the American university today. Racially hyper-visible and invisible, Korean American students face particular challenges as they try to realize their college dreams against the subtle, day-to-day workings of race. They frequently encounter the accusation of racial self-segregation—a charge accentuated by the fact that many attend the same Evangelical Protestant church—even as they express the desire to distinguish themselves from their families and other Korean Americans. Abelmann concludes by examining the current state of the university, reflecting on how better to achieve the university’s liberal ideals despite its paradoxical celebration of diversity and relative silence on race.

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Abelmann has created a collection of self-segregating woes formed by some Korean-American students at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Although the stories included in the text are interesting, many of the students have a mis-placed minority complex attributed, by Abelmann as well, to 'White America'. Often the students interviewed (which by the way, the examples of interviews in the book attest to the extremely poor and overtly biased interview questions) would attribute their troubles adapting to university life to their Korean upbringing - which clashes extensively with the "norms" of American college life. Abelmann seems to revert everything back to the down-trodden, minority Korean-Americans who are incessantly demeaned by 'White America'. The students stories - all of them - boil down to disappointment regarding expectations. A classic tale of "minorities" wanting to be treated as equals, while expecting special attention.All in all a disappointment for me. By far the worst academic text I have ever read - textbooks included. The only reason I finished the book was because it was assigned in a class, although I had to read it 10-15 minutes at a time before I tossed it aside in disgust - and borderline rage - at the terrible assumptions, disguised as conclusions, drawn by Abelmann.Teachers, do NOT assign this to your students! Students who must read this text...my sincerest apologies.