There have been times when Georgiann Davis felt that âsociologists are some of the most hypocritical people I have ever metâ.
Part of the explanation can be found in her remarkable new book, , which traces her startlingly unconventional journey from obese middle-school dropout to associate professor of sociology at the University of New Mexico.
A better grounding in grade school would certainly have helped her. Even before she was 13, Davis was obliged to take responsibility for managing the payroll in the family ice-cream business âwith only a calculator and an IRS [Internal Revenue Service] publication guideâ. Then again, such a business was never likely to succeed given her familyâs spectacular, criminal dysfunction.
Her brother punctured a fellow pupilâs lung while still at school and has been in trouble with the law ever since. Her mother, meanwhile, tried to steal her identity several times and ended up in jail alongside a child murderer. And although she took her mother in after her release, the latterâs behaviour was so enraging that she threw her out again even while her mother was undergoing chemotherapy.
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The details of her predicament are horribly compelling even as she tries to situate them in a wider sociological context. Davis sees her book as âa research-driven memoir. Everyone has a story to tell. I wanted to use sociological knowledge to make sense of mine.â Yet it was hard for her to âstudy social problems as an outsider coming in with a magnifying glass or a notebook. My family, friends and I have experienced some of these issues. Iâm in the weeds.â
Nevertheless, it was ultimately âmore freeingâ to write from personal experience. âIt reaches more people and brings sociocultural ideas to a broader audience,â she told ÌÇĐÄVlog. âIâm kind of bored with books which say âHereâs my theory. Here are my methods. Here is how I collected my data. Hereâs my analysis and findings.ââ
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Five Star White Trash is certainly very far from the typical scholarly monograph. It is full of sharp sociological insight but is utterly lacking in any kind of academic decorum. It offers a vivid account of what it is like to be part of a family that âused credit cards to go on elaborate Caribbean vacations and buy real fur coats...We were white, but not the right kind of white. We were five star white trash. We had borrowed money and tried to use it to buy class.â
It also describes the horrific experience of being intersex at a time when both doctors and families would typically decide on a sex and then operate on the child accordingly without explaining why. Davis has since become an activist and expert in the field, publishing a 2015 book titled Contesting Intersex: The Dubious Diagnosis.
Her memoir offers a vividly unvarnished account. When she was almost 12 and suffering acute abdominal pain, we read, her mother assumed it was âa sign that I was about to get my first period. She brought me to the washroom and used toilet paper to wipe herself. She showed me her discharge, asking me if I had something similar. I didnât, and I remember being quite disgusted with her nonchalant presentation of bodily fluid.â
After undergoing âstomach staplingâ to address her ongoing and related issues around weight, Davis experienced acute pain when food got stuck in her narrowed stomach passageway, which she could only relieve by vomiting. Hence, she tells us, she grew âincreasingly comfortable throwing up in public in front of anyone, and everywhere from a crowded parking lot to in the car at a red light. The bag my fast food came in often doubled as my vomit bag. I also went through many rolls of duct tape using it as a makeshift belt to hold up my shorts and pants that didnât have belt loops.â
She later resorted to over-the-counter pills, which meant â such was her desperation to lose weight â that she would âget excited every time I had to take a shit because the medication minimizes the amount of fat the body absorbs while eating and expels it through greasy bowel movementsâ.

Although she dropped out of school at the age of 12, largely to help out her needy mother, Davis always had a passion for education.
As a small child, she told THE, she âwould line up all my stuffed animals and dolls and reteach everything I had learned in class. I really felt drawn to go into education.â Her memoir describes how she began taking courses in a community college, initially in remedial writing and mathematics, as soon as she was able to. (She now teaches regression analysis to her students and has even co-authored a textbook on statistics.) She became fascinated by sociology and went on to acquire associate, bachelorâs, masterâs and doctoral degrees, and eventually a tenure-track position.
For some of this period, she had to cope with the predictable problems of looking after her motherâs unhouse-trained dogs. After her doctorate, she also became the University of Nevada, Las Vegasâ first-ever âprofessor-in-residenceâ, she noted, âand lived in the dormitory with the students. I was in my thirties living in a dorm! Colleagues would ask me why on earth I wanted to live in the dorm with students. I said: âBecause I donât have the privileges not to.ââ
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Back in 1997, before deciding to go back into education, she also worked as a clerical supervisor in the X-ray department of a hospital â as part of which, she had to put patientsâ files into blue or pink folders depending on their sex. As a gender scholar, she is horrified by the reflection that, by doing so, she was upholding a view of sex as binary âthat decades later I would teach my students is not only deeply flawed but also incredibly dangerousâ. She is even embarrassed about her early enthusiasm for the sitcom Friends, âgiven the showâs rampant racism, anti-fatness, and transphobiaâ.
Yet her academic persona hasnât entirely erased her earlier sensibilities. For instance, while she has become convinced that âprisons need to be replaced with community social services that do not enact racist and classist systems of punishment for social problemsâ, she canât deny that she also still thinks the best place for her own brother is behind bars.

Still, there are other ways in which Davis feels that her âlived experienceâ enriches her research, rather than throwing up cognitive dissonance. In her work on intersex, for instance, she recalls a leading expert in the field, who was not herself intersex, being baffled by her idea of writing a paper about hair. Yet Davis âknew this could be an issue for people in the intersex community because I was living that experience. Many of the people I interviewed would talk about how their romantic partners would make comments about their body hair or lack thereof. It may sound like a trivial thing, but it showed me a piece of the puzzle which is not visible to someone who has not had that lived experience.â
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Davis also feels that her effectiveness as an educator of her many first-generation students is enhanced by her ability to ârelate to their boredom sitting in a lecture, their excitement and ambition, their annoyance with faculty. I see myself in themâŠSometimes I feel about my colleagues: âYou are so out of touch and disconnected from our students!ââ
It is here that the alleged hypocrisy of sociologists comes in. Though they study social problems and understand inequality in theory, they often fail to act on that understanding, Davis believes. A good example is their frequent hostility to students who want to bring children into the classroom, which Davis considers âso rude and disconnected from the reality of our studentsâ lives. No one wants to bring their kid to class. They do so because their childcare fell through...And itâs not about letting their children have a play date while youâre teaching. For every student Iâve ever met, when a child acts up, they leave â and come back when the child has calmed down.â
Sometimes the children even follow what she is saying better than some of her students. She remembers logging one child aged seven or eight into an extra computer to allow him to play video games while she explained the notion of statistical significance. Unfortunately, this proved something of an uphill struggle that particular day: âWhen p is less than alpha, itâs significant,â she explained. âWhat is this one? No, itâs not significant! What is this one? Come on, folks.â
Eventually the little boy also got impatient, raised his hand and called out: âSheâs said it so many times!â

Davisâ publisher is marketing Five Star White Trash as an ââ to US vice-president J. D. Vanceâs celebrated 2016 book, Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis. Davis herself described it as âa queer responseâ.
Vance also wrote about âan upbringing filled with familial trauma, drug addiction and alcohol abuseâ, she explained, and of âhis hard work and determination to overcome the family he was born intoâ. She can relate to his stories of âhaving to tend to family issues while trying to focus on academic study and being pulled in different directionsâ. What she objects to is his failure to consider âhow his race also shaped his experiencesâ.
Vance managed to find support from âmentors and colleagues, who just [saw him] as a working-class guy from Middle America trying to do better than [his] family. Yet such olive branches or helping hands are extended a lot more to white people than to people of colour.â Since most of Davisâ classes are mostly populated by first-generation students of colour, she feels that she âowes it to them to, yes, talk about the adversity I overcame to get where I am â and for many of them thatâs inspiring â but also to acknowledge that my whiteness meant I had it differently from othersâ.
Her advice to those pursuing social mobility through higher education is to do their best to âfind a âpeer-plusâ, who is slightly ahead of where you want to be, and who represents your aspiration or dream. Look up to them and go down the path they have already carved.â It is a suggestion that you might expect Vance to endorse, but, like others associated with the Trump administration, he sometimes seems now to âchallenge the importance of education in peopleâs livesâ, according to Davis. âItâs embarrassing. He wouldnât have gotten to where he is now without education. Donât forget where you came from, sure, but also donât forget how you got to where you are.â
Equally objectionable to Davis are the conservative pundits who themselves benefited from an Ivy League education but now claim that âthese so-called elite institutions are poisoning the general populationâ.
One of the MAGA rightâs many gripes with universities is their supposed indoctrination of students with what it often refers to as âgender ideologyâ â with research into and even classroom discussion of gender issues increasingly being or . As a result, Davis argues that people like her are now âin a very scary placeâŠSomeone like Trump doesnât believe I even exist. People around him speak openly about sex being as simple as male and female. Itâs simply not true in my body. Itâs like saying âGravity doesnât existâ, just on a personal level.â
It is hard for her, she went on, to âseparate the personal and professional, given that the type of work I do is very much what I call scholar activism. But I do feel threatened professionally as well [as personally] because at any time we could see universities cave in to political pressures from the administrationâ and crack down on this kind of scholarship. She also worries about the impact on colleagues of Trumpâs threats to grant funding, though she is not herself âa grant-funded scholarâ.
Yet she is âless nervousâ than she might otherwise be by virtue of being based in âa blue stateâ (New Mexico) and at âa university which has been very protective of the type of scholarship we doâ. While she is disturbed by the possibility of losing her job, âbecause I worked so hard to get where I amâ, she also believes her background has provided her with crucial survival skills:
âMost academics follow a more traditional route and couldnât pivot to do something else,â she said. âI would really be comfortable doing different things if I had to.â
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