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Why did Black-Korean tensions result in violent clashes in Los
Angeles but not in New York City? In a book based on fieldwork and
on a nationwide database he constructed to track such conflicts,
Patrick D. Joyce goes beyond sociological and cultural
explanations. "No Fire Text Time shows how political practices and
urban institutions can channel racial and ethnic tensions into
protest or, alternatively, leave them free to erupt violently. Few
encounters demonstrate this connection better than those between
African Americans and Korean Americans. Cities like New York, where
politics is noisy, contentious, and involves people at the
grassroots, have seen extensive Black boycotts of Korean-owned
businesses (usually small grocery stores). African Americans in Los
Angeles have sustained few long-term boycotts of Korean American
businesses--but the absence of "routine" contention there goes hand
in hand with the large-scale riots of 1992 and continuous acts of
individual violence. In demonstrating how conflicts between these
groups were intimately tied to their political surroundings, this
book yields practical lessons for the future. City governments can
do little to fight widening economic inequality in an increasingly
diverse nation, Joyce writes. But officials and activists can
restructure political institutions to provide the foundations of
new multiracial coalitions.
Why did Black-Korean tensions result in violent clashes in Los
Angeles but not in New York City? In a book based on fieldwork and
on a nationwide database he constructed to track such conflicts,
Patrick D. Joyce goes beyond sociological and cultural
explanations. "No Fire Text Time shows how political practices and
urban institutions can channel racial and ethnic tensions into
protest or, alternatively, leave them free to erupt violently. Few
encounters demonstrate this connection better than those between
African Americans and Korean Americans. Cities like New York, where
politics is noisy, contentious, and involves people at the
grassroots, have seen extensive Black boycotts of Korean-owned
businesses (usually small grocery stores). African Americans in Los
Angeles have sustained few long-term boycotts of Korean American
businesses--but the absence of "routine" contention there goes hand
in hand with the large-scale riots of 1992 and continuous acts of
individual violence. In demonstrating how conflicts between these
groups were intimately tied to their political surroundings, this
book yields practical lessons for the future. City governments can
do little to fight widening economic inequality in an increasingly
diverse nation, Joyce writes. But officials and activists can
restructure political institutions to provide the foundations of
new multiracial coalitions.
The twelve essays in this volume propose new directions in the
analysis of class. John R. Hall argues that recent historical and
intellectual developments require reworking basic assumptions about
classes and their dynamics. The contributors effectively abandon
the notion of a transcendent class struggle. They seek instead to
understand the historically contingent ways in which economic
interests are pursued under institutionally, socially, and
culturally structured circumstances.
In his introduction, Hall proposes a neo-Weberian venue intended
to bring the most promising contemporary approaches to class
analysis into productive exchange with one other. Some of the
chapters that follow rework how classes are conceptualized. Others
offer historical and sociological reflections on questions of class
identity. A third cluster focuses on the politics of class
mobilizations and social movements in contexts of national and
global economic change.
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