Racial Situations | 
| Author: John Hartigan Jr. Publisher: Princeton University Press Category: Book
List Price: $33.95 Buy Used: $12.75 You Save: $21.20 (62%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 215967
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 360 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 5.9 x 1
ISBN: 0691028850 Dewey Decimal Number: 977.434004034 EAN: 9780691028859 ASIN: 0691028850
Publication Date: October 4, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Cover is delaminating at edge. Otherwise, excellent.
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Product Description
Racial Situations challenges perspectives on race that rely upon oft-repeated claims that race is culturally constructed and, hence, simply false and distorting. John Hartigan asserts, instead, that we need to explain how race is experienced by people as a daily reality. His starting point is the lives of white people in Detroit. As a distinct minority, whites in this city can rarely assume they are racially unmarked and normative--privileges generally associated with whiteness. Hartigan conveys their attempts to make sense of how race matters in their lives and in Detroit generally. Rather than compiling a generic sampling of white views, Hartigan develops an ethnographic account of whites in three distinct neighborhoods--an inner city, underclass area; an adjacent, debatably gentrifying community; and a working-class neighborhood bordering one of the city's wealthy suburbs. In tracking how racial tensions develop or become defused in each of these sites, Hartigan argues that whites do not articulate their racial identity strictly in relation to a symbolic figure of black Otherness. He demonstrates, instead, that intraracial class distinctions are critical in whites' determinations of when and how race matters. In each community, the author charts a series of names--"hillbilly," "gentrifier," and "racist"--which whites use to make distinctions among themselves. He shows how these terms function in everyday discourses that reflect the racial consciousness of the communities and establish boundaries of status and privilege among whites in these areas.
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| Customer Reviews:
Fascinating! July 2, 2001 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
As a white person who grew up in Detroit in the 1980s, this book caught my eye. Hartigan explores the ways in which whites are viewed in Detroit, in ways that can either emphasize or de-emphasize their whiteness. He explores whites in three different neighborhoods, where they are variously constructed as hillbillies, gentrifiers and racists, by interviewing and observing residents. He also brings into play the history of Detroit - the differences between the riots of the 40s and 60s - and examines the implications of racial tensions. Hartigan makes his topic vivid and interesting through his incorporation of personal narratives and his own experiences. This book is good not only for the anthropologist interested in American ethnography but also for the reader interested in race and history.
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