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Urban ethnography is one of the oldest traditions of American
social science and has helped define how we think about cities and
city dwellers since its inception in the early twentieth century.
Renewed interest in urban poverty, the immigrant experience, and
gentrification among the public and scholars alike has focused
attention on qualitative methods in the social sciences, and the
field of urban ethnography in particular receives more attention
now than at any point since its inception. The Urban Ethnography
Reader assembles the very best of American ethnographic writing,
from classic works to contemporary research, and aims to present
ethnography as social science, social history, and literature
alongside its traditional place as methodology. In addition to an
original introduction that highlights the importance and
development of the field, Kasinitz, Duneier, and Murphy also
provide introductions to each section of the book. The section
introductions will cover the period's historical events and how
they influenced the study of the city, the major themes and
preoccupations of ethnography, what was happening in the social
sciences as a whole, and how the excerpts chosen fit into the
larger work in which they were originally published. A valuable
companion to a wide range of courses on cities across the social
sciences, The Urban Ethnography Reader captures the diversity, the
historical development, and the continuing importance of the
ethnographic approach to understanding American communities.
Urban ethnography is one of the oldest traditions of American
social science and has helped define how we think about cities and
city dwellers since its inception in the early twentieth century.
Renewed interest in urban poverty, the immigrant experience, and
gentrification among the public and scholars alike has focused
attention on qualitative methods in the social sciences, and the
field of urban ethnography in particular receives more attention
now than at any point since its inception. The Urban Ethnography
Reader assembles the very best of American ethnographic writing,
from classic works to contemporary research, and aims to present
ethnography as social science, social history, and literature
alongside its traditional place as methodology. In addition to an
original introduction that highlights the importance and
development of the field, Kasinitz, Duneier, and Murphy also
provide introductions to each section of the book. The section
introductions will cover the period's historical events and how
they influenced the study of the city, the major themes and
preoccupations of ethnography, what was happening in the social
sciences as a whole, and how the excerpts chosen fit into the
larger work in which they were originally published. A valuable
companion to a wide range of courses on cities across the social
sciences, The Urban Ethnography Reader captures the diversity, the
historical development, and the continuing importance of the
ethnographic approach to understanding American communities.
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