alternative economics
Can Black Students Afford NOT to Study Overseas?
Studying overseas is often thought to be an upper middle-class or wealthy bourgeois privilege that Black students cannot afford. Don't believe that hype! Because tuition, housing and transportation costs are higher in the United States than in many other countries, and educational subsidies are often lower here, astute Black students may find that they cannot afford NOT to study overseas.
For example, the annual tuition at United States colleges and universities is rarely less than $5000.00 per year and often comes closer to $$50,000 per year. Meanwhile, tuition at some French universities is as low as $500.00 per year, including a comprehensive health insurance package that covers prescription medicine. Effectively, the cost of college health insurance in the United States may exceed the cost of health insurance AND tuition in France.
Comprehensive US financial aid may be available for American students to study overseas. Many United States colleges and universities permit students to remain enrolled in the United States, paying a nominal fee of perhaps $15.00 per semester for continued enrollment, while actually earning many of their degree credits at a foreign institution, and paying the substantially lower foreign tuition. Because the students remain enrolled at US institutions, they remain eligible for all available US financial aid, but they can spend it overseas in an environment where money goes much further.
Awesomeness of the day | alternative economics | Education | multiculturalism | multilingualism | France
To hell with a bigger piece of the pie, we want the whole fucking bakery!
©2007 Lilian M. Friedberg
This is rather long, and I'm recycling it (from my own blog and MLW) partly in response to something someone said (JJ Ross I believe) in one of the dKos threads....a question about the 'whole enchilada.'
This subject came up the other day in a class I am teaching, when I explained to a student that one of the slogans of the German feminist movement of the late 70s, early 80s had been: "to hell with a bigger piece of the pie, we want the whole fucking bakery!" It was immediately apparent that my student did not understand the slogan's intended spirit--he immediately said something like "take control of everything." No, I said, it's not about taking control of everything, it's that we (as radical feminists) don't have any interest in this whole damn "piece of the pie"-game--we want the whole fucking bakery so that we can bake a completely new pie, with new ingredients, new recipes, new everything, not so that we can control existing institutions.
We aren't in the market for "control"--we're looking for bread, bread and roses. Gainful employment. Meaningful life.
My experiences in the German feminist movement--nearly ten years, from 1984--1993, put the whole "feminist enchilada" in a different light. I rarely comment on these things, for fear of stepping on toes or sticking my finger in the wrong freshly-baked serving of banana cream pie. Looking back now, though, it still feels to me like the American feminist movement has been forced into a box where its almost single-minded focus must be on the ability to fuck freely and to keep scripture off its soul!
The German feminist movement, at the time--and to some extent still today--had the luxury of focusing on more of those "bread and roses" issues: the transformation of economic structures and work environments to render them amenable to "meaning life" for women; creating sustainable economic paradigms in which women of all colors, creed and sexual orientation could be gainfully employed, doing meaningful work and at a comfortable living wage. And to me, these issues remain of central concern. Priority concern. Here's hoping this "personal is political" story might shed some light on the whole spectrum of "feminisms" that are out there, the different forms and focuses they may or may not take.
In the 1980s, I spent a lot of time working with witches. In Europe. Italy, Switzerland, Ireland, and above all in Germany--the place where the greatest number of historical witches is said to have gone to the grave in the Burning Times. In Italy, where the Witches, rather than be burned at the stake, filled their pockets with stones and walked into the sea--only to emerge centuries later, in the form of the women with whom I was working. In Ireland, where I once sat for hours on end in this little Witches' Hill. There's an inscription on the back of this picture. It reads: October 30, 1987. Love, Margareta.
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