
The Company She Keeps
Valerie Hey(Author)
Open University Press
Published on 16. January 1997
Book
Paperback/Softback
208 pages
978-0-335-19406-3 (ISBN)
Description
This lively and revealing study explores a sociologically invisible but important social relationship: girls' friendships. It uncovers often suppressed school-girl cultures, at times representing in their most condensed and dramatic form issues of intimacy, secrecy and struggle. Most women have memories of, and most mothers of young daughters become re-immersed in, these all-consuming but little understood passions. This taken-for-granted 'ordinary' relationship is examined using girls' notes, talk, diaries and interviews gathered by observing girls groups within city schools.
An important and previously ignored question is addressed by examining how girls' intimacy is structured through class, gender, sexuality and race, especially its paradoxical role in maintaining and challenging 'compulsory heterosexuality'. In this way, a series of case studies analyses how girls variously come to understand and construct "difference". In addition, this detailed analysis of girls' friendship contributes to our understanding of how girls simultaneously survive their schools, their families, their relations and subordination to boys and men.
Valerie Hey returns the reader to the terrain of loss and recollection, of girls' pleasure and pain in their friendship, and asserts the claims of the social through identifying how this is written into the cultural forms of girls' relationships with each other. Students of women's studies, education, sociology and social psychology will find this book to be an invaluable exploration of how every-day 'obvious' experience is played out as forms of subjectivity and power.
An important and previously ignored question is addressed by examining how girls' intimacy is structured through class, gender, sexuality and race, especially its paradoxical role in maintaining and challenging 'compulsory heterosexuality'. In this way, a series of case studies analyses how girls variously come to understand and construct "difference". In addition, this detailed analysis of girls' friendship contributes to our understanding of how girls simultaneously survive their schools, their families, their relations and subordination to boys and men.
Valerie Hey returns the reader to the terrain of loss and recollection, of girls' pleasure and pain in their friendship, and asserts the claims of the social through identifying how this is written into the cultural forms of girls' relationships with each other. Students of women's studies, education, sociology and social psychology will find this book to be an invaluable exploration of how every-day 'obvious' experience is played out as forms of subjectivity and power.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Milton Keynes
United Kingdom
Illustrations
bibliography, index
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 151 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
292 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-335-19406-3 (9780335194063)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Valerie Hey
The Company She Keeps
E-Book
01/1997
1st Edition
McGraw-Hill Education
€66.69
Available for download
Person
Valerie Hey is a social researcher working in the Social Science Research Unit, the Institute of Education, University of London. After a career in further and secondary education she moved into academic research and is currently writing about girls' and boys' informal schooling cultures in the context of claims about boys' underachievement. She has two daughters and lives in London.
Content
Grandiose revelations of the obvious
themes of girls friendships
Re/theorising culture
girl subjects and girls subjectivities
Learning your place
researching into girls' friendships
Middle class girls managing their differences
Cultural practices of friendship amongst white working class girls
Hyper femininity revisited
a working class girl's heterosexual education
Young, gifted and white
middle class femininities
Girls cultural and social identities and the construction of hegemony
Bibliography
Index.
themes of girls friendships
Re/theorising culture
girl subjects and girls subjectivities
Learning your place
researching into girls' friendships
Middle class girls managing their differences
Cultural practices of friendship amongst white working class girls
Hyper femininity revisited
a working class girl's heterosexual education
Young, gifted and white
middle class femininities
Girls cultural and social identities and the construction of hegemony
Bibliography
Index.