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Loading... Sidewalkby Mitchell Duneier
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. One of the best ethnographies I've read. (Did I mention that I don't read ethnographies often?) Duneier's dedication to researching and corroborating statements made by his subjects, his care in conducting follow-up interviews with subjects and incidental passers-by, and his sensitivity in reporting (and humor) have created a first rate ethnography. He blends his extensive knowledge of street life studies, black studies, and theory with first-person observations and participation in life on the sidewalks of Greenwich Village. Ovie Carter's copious photographs make this a book to treasure. ( )no reviews | add a review
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That moment was one of Duneier's inspirations to spend years studying--getting to know, really--Hakim and other book and magazine vendors on his patch of Sixth Avenue. Sidewalk explains much about the street vendors: How did this become legal? Where do vendors obtain their merchandise? How do they interact with potential customers? When do they find time to go to the bathroom (and, for that matter, where do they go)? But it's ultimately about the people themselves--quoted at length from Duneier's tape-recorded interviews and photographed by Ovie Carter--as they do their best to live successfully on their own terms, with all the good and bad consequences that entail. Some of these people (almost all men) are drug addicts, yes, and some of them choose to live as "unhoused" individuals. But many of them find a strong sense of purpose and identity in their work and choose to live in ways that best facilitate that work; they are as motivated--more, perhaps--as workers holding "respectable" office jobs. Nonacademic readers may glaze over at some of Duneier's longer explanations of his methodology, and he seems occasionally overapologetic when quoting the uncensored language of his subjects, but few books succeed at plunging the reader into a community and delineating the character of its members as Sidewalk does.
(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 15:27:39 -0500)
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