Abstract
The major aim of this research is to reopen the study of the subjective experience of upward mobility and to incorporate race and gender into our vision of the process. It examines evidence from a social science study of upward mobility among 200 Black and white professional-managerial women in the Memphis, Tennessee metropolitan area. The experiences of the women paint a different picture from the image of the mobility process that remains from scholarship conducted 20 to 30 years ago on white males. Relationships with family of origin, partners, children, friends, and the wider community shaped the way these women envision and accomplish mobility and the way they sustain themselves as professionals and managers. © 1992, SAGE PUBLICATIONS. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Higginbotham, E., & Weber, L. (1992). Moving up with kin and community: Upward Social Mobility for Black and White Women. Gender & Society, 6(3), 416–440. https://doi.org/10.1177/089124392006003005
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