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On the Edge - The Contested Cultures of English Suburbia After 7/7 (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R492
Discovery Miles 4 920
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On the Edge - The Contested Cultures of English Suburbia After 7/7 (Paperback, New)
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Loot Price R492
Discovery Miles 4 920
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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'A fascinating exploration of the complexity and diversity of
contemporary suburban life. In challenging our view of the suburbs
this book challenges our view of England - and in so doing disrupts
mainstream political orthodoxy.' Jon Cruddas Suburbs and the
relationships that sustain them have been subject to tremendous
changes in the last fifty years, with changing work patterns,
changing family lives, changing patterns of home ownership and a
massive shift in the structural relationships between inner cities
and their surrounding urban environment. But this transformation
has been largely overlooked, and the suburbs have lived on in the
collective imagination as places that are homogenous and/or boring.
But suburbs have always come in many shapes and sizes, and this
book documents widely varying forms of suburban life to construct a
compelling narrative of suburban diversity and variety. Huq
demonstrates conclusively that those who still fondly imagine the
suburbs as the preserve of maiden aunts on bicycles, the domain of
archetypal Englishness - or less fondly as places of stifling
conformism and stagnation - are wide of the mark. In this sense her
re-imagining of the suburbs is also a re-imagining of Englishness.
In an analysis that ranges across gender, ethnicity, class,
religion, lifestyle, consumerism, family life, gentrification,
property relations, political representation, city life and
globalisation, Huq presents a convincing case for the need to
radically rethink the way we understand contemporary suburban life.
Rupa Huq is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Kingston University.
Her first book, Beyond Subculture: pop, youth and identity in a
postcolonial world, was shortlisted for the British Sociological
Association's Philip Abrams Memorial Prize. She was Deputy Mayoress
of the London Borough of Ealing from 2010 to 2011. She has lived
for most of her life in suburbia apart from periods studying at
Cambridge and Strasbourg Universities and a stint working at the
University of Manchester.
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