"Growing up in Transit is a welcome addition to the emerging literature on elite schooling in the Global South. Its rich ethnographic details, critical but sensitive rendering of the lives of privileged youth, and attention to contemporary political economy present a nuanced and evocative analysis of privilege. The book will be of interest to anthropologists and sociologists of education." - Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (JRAI)
"This well‐written and engaging book gives new interesting information and fresh analytical perspectives on an increasingly common phenomenon that has not been widely studied among anthropologists until now...[It] can be recommended to anyone interested in multiculturalism and migration; looking at the more privileged migrants provides food for thought also for scholars studying migration in less privileged contexts." - Social Anthropology
"The pace of the book is methodical and thorough. Following an admiring Foreword from Fazal Rizvi, the 18-page preface is an enlightening and necessary account of the author's own heritage, life and intellectual development, establishing her authority as a quadrilingual emic researcher in several of the student communities... It is its objectivity and methodology that facilitates it which make this book so original...This ground-breaking book offers a foundation for studies in the new generation of international schools." - Journal of Research in International Education
"[This volume] makes a riveting read... Danau Tanu delivers an exceptional, genuinely interesting, thought-provoking account of her experiences in a secondary school in Jakarta... [that is] tightly researched and presented in lucid prose, ... [and] a must-read for all leaders of international schools because it presents the opportunity for them to question the most fundamental purpose of what they do, i.e. shape the contexts in which identities develop." - International Schools Journal
"The book is an exceptional contribution to the theory and practice of cosmopolitanism among privileged students with high mobility in transnational spaces such as an international school... The author's unique experience growing up as a Third Culture Kid enabled her to breathe life into the ethnographic data, making sophisticated concepts and complicated processes discussed in the book engaging and relevant." - Asia Pacific Journal of Education
"This book is the first that not only allow insight into the mechanism of cultural reproduction of transnationality with western norms set by International Schools, but the author goes beyond her perspectives from inside and, not least through her appealing and relaxed style, allows the reader to participate." - Anthropos
"This ethnographic study offers a valuable correction to our understandings of the 'third culture kid' phenomenon." - Huon Wardle, Centre for Cosmopolitan Studies, University of St Andrews
"This book offers profound insights on how class and race can play out among globally mobile children. I highly recommend it." - Ruth E. Van Reken, co-author, Third Culture Kids: Growing Up Among Worlds