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Hobos, Hustlers, and Backsliders - Homeless in San Francisco (Hardcover)
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Hobos, Hustlers, and Backsliders - Homeless in San Francisco (Hardcover)
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Winner of the 2011 Robert Park Award for the Best Book in Community
and Urban Sociology, American Sociological Association, 2011
Co-winner of the 2011 Mary Douglas Prize for Best Book in the
Sociology of Culture, American Sociological Association, 2011 When
homelessness reemerged in American cities during the 1980s at
levels not seen since the Great Depression, it initially provoked
shock and outrage. Within a few years, however, what had been
perceived as a national crisis came to be seen as a nuisance, with
early sympathies for the plight of the homeless giving way to
compassion fatigue and then condemnation. Debates around the
problem of homelessness-often set in terms of sin, sickness, and
the failure of the social system-have come to profoundly shape how
homeless people survive and make sense of their plights. In Hobos,
Hustlers, and Backsliders, Teresa Gowan vividly depicts the lives
of homeless men in San Francisco and analyzes the influence of the
homelessness industry on the streets, in the shelters, and on
public policy. Gowan shows some of the diverse ways that men on the
street in San Francisco struggle for survival, autonomy, and
self-respect. Living for weeks at a time among homeless men-working
side-by-side with them as they collected cans, bottles, and scrap
metal; helping them set up camp; watching and listening as they
panhandled and hawked newspapers; and accompanying them into soup
kitchens, jails, welfare offices, and shelters-Gowan immersed
herself in their routines, their personal stories, and their
perspectives on life on the streets. She observes a wide range of
survival techniques, from the illicit to the industrious, from drug
dealing to dumpster diving. She also discovered that prevailing
discussions about homelessness and its causes-homelessness as
pathology, homelessness as moral failure, and homelessness as
systemic failure-powerfully affect how homeless people see
themselves and their ability to change their situation. Drawing on
five years of fieldwork, this powerful ethnography of men living on
the streets of the most liberal city in America, Hobos, Hustlers,
and Backsliders, makes clear that the way we talk about issues of
extreme poverty has real consequences for how we address this
problem-and for the homeless themselves.
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