"overprivileged" as a word doesn't really make sense to me. like: "privileged" already has everything you need, denotatively and connotatively, right there
i will read the source to see if my little complaint holds up https://literaryreview.co.uk/the-students-who-went-to-sea
William Whyte - The Students Who Went to Sea

William Whyte: The Students Who Went to Sea - The Floating University: Experience, Empire, and the Politics of Knowledge by Tamson Pietsch

Literary Review
@maya ah I was going to wonder if "overprivileged" makes sense for, like, concepts or priorities (where something could be appropriately privileged: one might privilege escaping a burning building over adjusting one's cravat) but in that context the only beneficial role it could be playing is emphasis?
@egnor thinking about this more, I think a bit of my perception of redundancy is just inchoate annoyed feelings about the culture overstating the extent to which college-age folks have "earned" their social sorting