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Engaging Strangers - Civil Rites, Civic Capitalism, and Public Order in Boston (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,619
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Engaging Strangers - Civil Rites, Civic Capitalism, and Public Order in Boston (Hardcover)
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Partisans on both the left and right wings of America's theory
class and political spectrum believe we're in trouble, big trouble.
The economy is limping along. Inequality has reached unprecedented
levels. And we seem to be on the verge of being overwhelmed by
immigrants who don't look and act anything like our grandparents
did much less the men and women who founded our country. Angry,
scared, disengaged and distrustful when we aren't openly
antagonistic toward each other, Americans can't figure out who we
are as a people and openly fret about our best days being behind
us. To make matters worse, our political system, the one place
we're supposed to be able to work on behalf of a broader public
good with people who aren't like us, appears even more broken than
these other parts of our culture. There's some unexpected good
news, however, and it's coming from one of the last places in
America you'd expect different people to be getting along: Boston.
Bostonians - well known for their unwelcoming and sometimes violent
treatment of newcomers and unwillingness to find common ground with
people deemed outsiders - aren't acting broken or taking their
resentments out on each other these days. They've turned instead to
calmer ways of talking about each other and treating each other in
public. Far from being disconnected and afraid, people in Boston
are better connected and more respectful of each other, and their
city is better organized and more orderly than at any time in its
long and storied history. Bostonians have learned to get along with
the strangers among them in ways their ancestors never knew or
expected the rest of us would be willing to entertain much less
master. They have their civic act together. Engaging Strangers
explores how the people of Boston have learned to practice a more
congenial and respectful set of civic virtues. In this book, the
author provides a model for civic conduct for the rest of America
to study and follow.
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