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Hoover Crips is the product of field interviews with Crip gang
members in South Central Los Angeles, California. Older gang
members offer a dramatic portrayal of their life experiences within
a social world beset by gangster politics. The book reveals the
Hoover street gang is a community institution that significantly
impacts the lifestyle choices of Black male residents. The main
feature of the book is its insider's view of gangs. Unique
information gathered by Professor Steven R. Cureton includes: * the
origins and current state of the Hoover community, gang, and
residents * insight into the subculture of gang membership,
reputation building, and hustling drugs, guns, and people for
survival * the balance between humanity, civility, peace, and war
in gang life * and new discoveries relative to Black residency in a
gang-dominated environment. The study concludes with a "where they
are now" for the participants in the interviews. This book is
recommended for courses in deviance, juvenile delinquency,
criminology, cultural deviance, urban communities/sociology of
communities, race in America, Black experiences, race relations,
race and ethnic relations, qualitative research methodology, and
ethnographic research.
Black Vanguards and Black Gangsters: From Seeds of Discontent to a
Declaration of War examines the extent to which black gangsterism
is a product of civil rights gains, community transition, black
flight, social activism, and failed grassroots social movement
groups. Unfortunately, the voice of the ghetto was politically
tempered, silenced, ignored, and at times rebuked by a black
leadership that seemed to be preoccupied with a middle-class
integrationist agenda. As a result, a once strong sense of
universal brotherhood became fractured and the mood of the
oppressed shifted to confusion only to be tempered by relentless
frustration, out of which emerged black gangs.
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