The Performance and Construction of Subjectivities of Early Adolescent Girls in Book Club Discussion Groups

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Abstract

This study examines the performance and construction of subjectivities of four early adolescent, sixth-grade girls as they read and discussed a novel about two adolescent Mexican children seeking a new life in America. Using data gathered through ethnographic methods such as participant-observation, interviews, dialogue journals, and book club discussions, the author describes the participants as they performed their subjectivities in various contexts, focusing specifically on their performances while reading and discussing the novel in book club groups. The girls’ conversations about themselves suggested that they engaged in ongoing constructions of their subjectivities as they interacted with the text and with each other. Analysis of data was inductive and was informed by theories of experiential response as developed by Louise Rosenblatt and others. The discussion groups provided a fertile environment in which the girls could reflect on the text, share responses, argue opposing viewpoints, and negotiate shared meanings. During the discussions of the novel, the girls debated a variety of personal and social issues, sometimes recognizing and verbally acknowledging shifts in their values, beliefs, and attitudes as they negotiated meanings and clarified understandings. © 2002, SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.

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APA

Broughton, M. A. (2002). The Performance and Construction of Subjectivities of Early Adolescent Girls in Book Club Discussion Groups. Journal of Literacy Research, 34(1), 1–38. https://doi.org/10.1207/s15548430jlr3401_1

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