Paper Status Tracking
Contact us
[email protected]
Click here to send a message to me 3275638434
Paper Publishing WeChat

Article
Affiliation(s)

University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK

ABSTRACT

The literature on international students’ experiences frequently depicts them within a ‘deficient’ framework, highlighting their perceived lack of essential skills for managing their studies. Moreover, international students’ emotional experiences are often construed as personal and psychological attributes, with their emotions viewed as transient and pathological phases that they will eventually overcome to assimilate into the local context. However, there exists a dearth of literature investigating international students’ experiences from a sociological perspective, particularly concerning their emotional experiences within the broader social and political milieu. Utilizing a longitudinal research design to monitor 25 Chinese international postgraduates from multiple universities in London and Glasgow over the course of one year, this study illuminates the racialised, classed, and gendered dimensions of international students’ experiences in UK higher education through an exploration of their feelings of shame. Drawing on the research findings, it is evident that power relations operate insidiously and covertly to systematically frame international students’ experiences as personal or cultural ‘deficiency’. This process represents a form of misrecognition, which manifests in racialised, gendered, and classed feelings of shame, experienced at the personal level as insecurity, ‘stupidity’, exclusion, and self-doubt. Consequently, social and cultural inequalities within higher education are often situated at the individual level.

KEYWORDS

international students, shame, social inequalities, higher education

Cite this paper

Mei Hu. International Students’ Feeling of Shame in the Higher Education: An Intersectional Analysis of Their Racialised, Gendered and Classed Experiences in the UK Universities. Sociology Study, Jan.-Feb. 2024, Vol. 14, No. 1, 69-89.

References

Ahmed, S. (2004a). Affective economics. Social Text, 22(2), 117-139.  

Ahmed, S. (2004b). Collective feelings: Or, the impressions left by others. Theory, Culture & Society, 21(2), 25-42.

Ahmed, S. (2007). A phenomenology of Whiteness. Feminist Theory, 8(2), 149-168.

Ahmed, S. (2013). Embodying diversity: Problems and paradoxes for Black feminists. In H. Mirza and C. Joseph (Eds.), Black and postcolonial feminisms in new times: Researching educational inequalities (pp. 41-52). Routledge.

Ansley, F. L. (1997). White supremacy (and what we should do about it). In R. Delgado and J. Stefancic (Eds.), Critical White studies: Looking behind the mirror (pp. 592-595). Temple University Press.

Archer, L. (2003). Race, masculinity and schooling: Muslim boys and education. McGraw-Hill Education (UK).

Atencio, M., & Wright, J. (2009). ‘Ballet it’s too Whitey’: Discursive hierarchies of high school dance spaces and the constitution of embodied feminine subjectivities. Gender and Education, 21(1), 31-46.

Bennett, A., & Burke, P. J. (2018). Re/conceptualising time and temporality: An exploration of time in higher education. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 39(6), 913-925.

Bertram, C. C., & Crowley, M. S. (2012). Teaching about sexual violence in higher education: Moving from concern to conscious resistance. Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, 33(1), 63-82.

Bourdieu, P. (1977). Outline of a theory of practice (No. 16). Cambridge University Press.

Bourdieu, P. (1986). The forms of capital. In J. G. Richardson (Ed.), Handbook of theory and research for the sociology of education (pp. 241-258). Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood.

Bourdieu, P. (1990a). In other words: Essays toward a reflexive sociology. Stanford University Press.

Bourdieu, P. (1990b). The logic of practice. Stanford University Press.

Bourdieu, P. (1993). The field of cultural production: Essays on art and literature (R. Johnson, Ed.). Cambridge: Polity Press.

Burke, P. J. (2013). The right to higher education: Neoliberalism, gender and professional mis/recognitions. International Studies in Sociology of Education, 23(2), 107-126.

Burke, P. J. (2017). Difference in higher education pedagogies: Gender, emotion and shame. Gender and Education, 29(4), 430-444.

Burke, P. J., Coffey, J., Parker, J., Hardacre, S., Cocuzzoli, F., Shaw, J., & Haro, A. (2023). ‘It’s a lot of shame’: Understanding the impact of gender-based violence on higher education access and participation. Teaching in Higher Education, pp. 1-16.

Chen, J. (2013). A middle class without democracy: Economic growth and the prospects for democratization in China. Oxford University Press.

Clark, T., Foster, L., Sloan, L., & Bryman, A. (2021).  Bryman’s social research methods (6th ed.). Oxford University Press.

Clarke, V., & Braun, V. (2017). Thematic analysis. The Journal of Positive Psychology, 12(3), 297-298.

Diangelo, R. J. (2006). The production of Whiteness in education: Asian international students in a college classroom. Teachers College Record, 108(10), 1983-2000.

Duncan, P. (2009). Tell this silence: Asian American women writers and the politics of speech. University of Iowa Press.

English, F. W., & Bolton, C. L. (2016). Bourdieu for educators: Policy and practice.  Los Angeles: SAGE.

Fanon, F. (2016). Black skin, white masks. In W. Longhofer and D. Winchester (Eds.), Social theory re-wired: New connections to classical and contemporary perspectives (pp. 394-401). Routledge.

Foucault, M. (1980). Power/knowledge: Selected interviews and other writings, 1972-1977 (C. Gordon, Ed.). New York: Pantheon.

Foucault, M. (2008). The birth of biopolitics: Lectures at the College de France 1978-1979 (G. Burchell, Ed.). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

Fraser, N. (2013). Fortunes of feminism: From state-managed capitalism to neoliberal crisis. Verso Books.

Gordon, C. (1991). Government rationality: An introduction. In G. Burchell, C. Gordon, and P. Miller (Eds.), The Foucault effect: Studies in governmentality (pp. 1-51). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Gu, Q. (2009). Maturity and interculturality: Chinese students’ experiences in UK higher education. European Journal of Education, 44(1), 37-52.

Han, X. (2023). Disciplinary power matters: Rethinking governmentality and policy enactment studies in China. Journal of Education Policy, 38(3), 408-431.

Johnstone, M., & Lee, E. (2017). Canada and the global rush for international students: Reifying a neo-imperial order of Western dominance in the knowledge economy era. Critical Sociology, 43(7-8), 1063-1078.

Kurzon, D. (1997). Discourse of silence. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

Lawler, S. (2005). Introduction: Class, culture and identity. Sociology, 39(5), 797-806.

Leathwood, C., & Hey, V. (2009). Gender/ed discourses and emotional sub-texts: Theorising emotion in UK higher education. Teaching in Higher Education, 14(4), 429-440.

Leathwood, C., & Read, B. (2008). Gender and the changing face of higher education: A feminized future? McGraw-Hill Education (UK).

Li, J. H. (2022). How am I supposed to feel? Female students’ emotional reasoning about academic becoming in transnational higher education. Gender and Education, 34(5), 561-576.

Liu, J. (2006). From learner passive to learner active? The case of Chinese postgraduate students studying marketing in the UK. International Journal of Management Education, 7(2), 33-40. 

Loveday, V. (2015). Working-class participation, middle-class aspiration? Value, upward mobility and symbolic indebtedness in higher education. The Sociological Review, 63(3), 570-588.

Loveday, V. (2016). Embodying deficiency through ‘affective practice’: Shame, relationality, and the lived experience of social class and gender in higher education. Sociology, 50(6), 1140-1155.

Lu, X. Y. (Ed.). (2002). Dangdai zhongguo shehui jieceng yanjiu baogao (Research report on contemporary China’s social classes). Beijing: Shehui kexue wenxian chubanshe.

Lu, X. Y. (Ed.). (2004). Dangdai zhongguo shehui liudong (Social mobility in contemporary China). Beijing: Shehui kexue wenxian chubanshe.

Marginson, S. (2013). Global field and global imagining: Bourdieu and worldwide higher education. In  M. David and R. Naidoo (Eds.), The sociology of higher education: Reproduction, transformation and change in a global era (pp. 6-18). Routledge.

Naidoo, R. (2004). Fields and institutional strategy: Bourdieu on the relationship between higher education, inequality and society. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 25(4), 457-471.

Oberg, K. (1960). Cultural shock: Adjustment to new cultural environments. Practical Anthropology, 7, 177-182.

Ploner, J. (2018). International students’ transitions to UK higher education—Revisiting the concept and practice of academic hospitality. Journal of Research in International Education, 17(2), 164-178.

Ploner, J., & Nada, C. (2020). International student migration and the postcolonial heritage of European higher education: Perspectives from Portugal and the UK. Higher Education, 80, 373-389.

Quan, R., He, X., & Sloan, D. (2016). Examining Chinese postgraduate students’ academic adjustment in the UK higher education sector: A process-based stage model. Teaching in Higher Education, 21(3), 326-343.

Raphael Reed, L., Croudace, C., Harrison, N., Baxter, A., & Last, K. (2007). Young participation in higher education: A sociocultural study of educational engagement in Bristol South parliamentary constituency. Research Summary; a HEFCE-funded Study. Bristol: The University of the West of England.

Rizvi, F. (2007). Postcolonialism and globalization in education. Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies, 7(3), 256-263.

Rodriguez, D. (2011). Silence as speech: Meanings of silence for students of color in predominantly White classrooms. International Review of Qualitative Research, 4(1), 111-144.

Rose, N., OMalley, P., & Valverde, M. (2006). Governmentality.  Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 2, 83-104.

Scheff, T. J. (2000). Shame and the social bond: A sociological theory. Sociological Theory, 18(1), 84-99.

Skeggs, B. (1997). Formations of class and gender. London: SAGE.

Skeggs, B. (2011). Imagining personhood differently: Person value and autonomist working-class value practices. The sociological Review, 59(3), 496-513.

Tsang, E. Y. H. (2013). The quest for higher education by the Chinese middle class: Retrenching social mobility? Higher Education, 66, 653-668.

Valencia, R. R. (1997). Conceptualizing the notion of deficit thinking. In  R. R. Valencia (Ed.), The evolution of deficit thinking: Educational thought and practice (pp. 1-12). Routledge.

Wang, C., Shim, S. S., & Wolters, C. A. (2017). Achievement goals, motivational self-talk, and academic engagement among Chinese students. Asia Pacific Education Review, 18(3), 295-307.

Wang, L., & Byram, M. (2011). ‘But when you are doing your exams it is the same as in China’—Chinese students adjusting to Western approaches to teaching and learning. Cambridge Journal of Education, 41(4), 407-424.

Wang, S., & Moskal, M. (2019). What is wrong with silence in intercultural classrooms? An insight into international students’ integration at a UK university. Journal of Comparative & International Higher Education, 11, 52-58.

Waters, J. L. (2012). Geographies of international education: Mobilities and the reproduction of social (dis) advantage. Geography Compass, 6(3), 123-136.

Webb, P. T. (2011). The evolution of accountability. Journal of Education Policy, 26(6), 735-756.

Winstead, T. (2009). The transformative possibilities of higher education: A study of working-class womens strategies of hope and resistance at a U.S. community college (Unpublished doctoral thesis, Institute of Education, University of London).

Ye, L. L. (2018). Intercultural experience and identity: Narratives of Chinese doctoral students in the UK. Springer.

Zheng, H., & Li, L. (2004). Dangdai zhongguo chengshi shehui jiegou (Social structure of the cities in contemporary China). Beijing: Zhongguo renmin daxue chubanshe.

Zhu, H., & O’Sullivan, H. (2022). Shhhh! Chinese students are studying quietly in the UK. Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 59(3), 275-284.

Zhu, J. (2016). Chinese overseas students and intercultural learning environments: Academic adjustment, adaptation and experience. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

About | Terms & Conditions | Issue | Privacy | Contact us
Copyright © 2001 - David Publishing Company All rights reserved, www.davidpublisher.com
3 Germay Dr., Unit 4 #4651, Wilmington DE 19804; Tel: 1-323-984-7526; Email: [email protected]