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On The Edge - A History Of Poor Black Children And Their American Dreams (Paperback)
Loot Price: R479
Discovery Miles 4 790
You Save: R95
(17%)
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On The Edge - A History Of Poor Black Children And Their American Dreams (Paperback)
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List price R574
Loot Price R479
Discovery Miles 4 790
You Save R95 (17%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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A report that asks, and attempts to answer, the often sotto-voce
questions: Why does violence seem so pervasive in black
communities? Why has integration of blacks faltered behind that of
others - Hispanics and Orientals, for example? Nightingale
(History/UMass at Amherst), who's white, began exploring the
history of black children for his Ph.D. thesis and got drawn into
contemporary black culture - specifically, among black children in
Philadelphia - as his research expanded. Contrary to popular
opinion, he found, young blacks are American before they're
African-American. They've bought into the ideas of pop culture -
materialism, bootstrap mobility, individuality - and have left
behind the African-American tradition of community. More
importantly, they've learned the values of frontier justice,
vigilante "law and order," and violence, along with the idea that
blacks are somehow more prone to violence than whites. With
patterns of harsh discipline established in many black households,
and with searches for jobs that would permit them conspicuous
consumption frustrated by racism, many young blacks - usually males
- have turned to violence. Nightingale ties the growth in violence
to the hope raised and then dashed following WW II: that
African-Americans would become full partners in American society.
At the same time, the black community lost touch with the
traditions - including street-corner stories and rhymes - that had
permitted it to deal with earlier discrimination without physical
violence. While rap may reflect that tradition, rap's lyrics,
Nightingale says, offer messages that confuse rather than diffuse.
The author winds up with some ivory-tower solutions: an overhaul of
values and a commitment to jobs and the rebuilding of inner cities.
Not entirely convincing, but jammed with information that may lead
other researchers to answer some of those whispered questions.
(Kirkus Reviews)
Filled with fascinating insights into the collective emotional life
of inner-city kids, this book is also a highly original history of
the erosion of urban community life since World War II.
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