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Superintendents play a large role in the formation of relationships
and networks within their neighborhood; and yet, no study in social
science has focused on them. Williams closes this knowledge gap
through ethnographic fieldwork, providing an in-depth analysis of
the daily life of superintendents in the lower Harlem area in New
York City.
Through autobiographical and historical information, Reflecting on
WWII, Manzanar, and the WRA provides a broad overview of life in
California both before and after the bombing of Pearl Harbor,
leading to the creation of the Manzanar War Relocation Center, the
first camp built for the incarceration of Japanese Americans during
WWII. Although from outside its perimeter Manzanar camp resembled a
military base, this book reveals it to have been more like a city,
yet one its inhabitants were forcibly confined to. The War
Relocation Authority hired over 200 employees to live within the
same barbed-wire enclosure and tasked them with creating and
running this complex facility. This book, told from the first-hand
experiences of the teenage son of two WRA employees, focuses on the
complexities of life within Manzanar camp as employees and
internees learned to work together to build a city, complete with
hospital, schools, churches, and manufacturing plants, out of an
incarceration center. It was through daily, side by side contact
that each grew to understand and respect the other. Never before
has a book's focus fallen upon the WRA employees and their families
and the day to day struggles of operating the camp at Manzanar.
There is no rawer human experience than sex, and in a city as
diverse as New York, sexual experiences come in many forms. In the
pre-Giuliani days, temptation flooded Times Square on theater
marquees and neon signs. Behind unmarked doors downtown, more
adventurous experiences awaited for those in the know. In The Soft
City, the ethnographer Terry Williams, with the help of accomplices
and informants, ventures deep into the underground world of sex in
New York. The book explores different aspects of the "perverse
space" of the city: porn theaters, sex shops, peep shows, restroom
cruising, sadomasochism clubs, swingers' events, and many more.
Featuring field notes taken between 1975 and the present, The Soft
City documents the ways that New Yorkers on the social periphery
have thought about and pursued sex, whether for recreation or to
make a living. It also presents an unconventional account of New
York City's many transformations, showing how the soft city-its
people and their unique character-evolved in response to official
and social pressures. Featuring Williams's unmistakable portraits
of the demimonde as well as the accounts of other ethnographers
challenging themselves to dive into the city's hidden crannies, The
Soft City is as irreproducible as it is provocative.
Through autobiographical and historical information, Reflecting on
WWII, Manzanar, and the WRA provides a broad overview of life in
California both before and after the bombing of Pearl Harbor,
leading to the creation of the Manzanar War Relocation Center, the
first camp built for the incarceration of Japanese Americans during
WWII. Although from outside its perimeter Manzanar camp resembled a
military base, this book reveals it to have been more like a city,
yet one its inhabitants were forcibly confined to. The War
Relocation Authority hired over 200 employees to live within the
same barbed-wire enclosure and tasked them with creating and
running this complex facility. This book, told from the first-hand
experiences of the teenage son of two WRA employees, focuses on the
complexities of life within Manzanar camp as employees and
internees learned to work together to build a city, complete with
hospital, schools, churches, and manufacturing plants, out of an
incarceration center. It was through daily, side by side contact
that each grew to understand and respect the other. Never before
has a book's focus fallen upon the WRA employees and their families
and the day to day struggles of operating the camp at Manzanar.
Terrie Williams knows that Black people are hurting. She knows
because she's one of them.
Terrie had made it: she had launched her own public relations
company with such clients as Eddie Murphy and Johnnie Cochran. Yet
she was in constant pain, waking up in terror, overeating in search
of relief. For thirty years she kept on her game face of success,
exhausting herself daily to satisfy her clients' needs while
neglecting her own.
Terrie finally collapsed, staying in bed for days. She had no clue
what was wrong or if there was a way out. She had hit rock bottom
and she needed and got help.
She learned her problem had a name -- depression -- and that many
suffered from it, limping through their days, hiding their hurt. As
she healed, her mission became clear: break the silence of this
crippling taboo and help those who suffer.
"Black Pain" identifies emotional pain -- which uniquely and
profoundly affects the Black experience -- as the root of lashing
out through desperate acts of crime, violence, drug and alcohol
abuse, eating disorders, workaholism, and addiction to shopping,
gambling, and sex. Few realize these destructive acts are symptoms
of our inner sorrow.
Black people are dying. Everywhere we turn, in the faces we see
and the headlines we read, we feel in our gut that something is
wrong, but we don't know what it is. It's time to recognize it and
work through our trauma.
In "Black Pain," Terrie has inspired the famous and the ordinary
to speak out and mental health professionals to offer solutions.
The book is a mirror turned on you. Do you see yourself and your
loved ones here? Do the descriptions of how the pain looks, feels,
and sounds seem far too familiar? Now you can do something about
it.
Stop suffering. The help the community needs is here: a clear
explanation of our troubles and a guide to finding relief through
faith, therapy, diet, and exercise, as well as through building a
supportive network (and eliminating toxic people).
"Black Pain" encourages us to face the truth about the issue that
plunges our spirits into darkness, so that we can step into the
healing light.
You are not on the ledge alone.
Superintendents play a large role in the formation of relationships
and networks within their neighborhood; and yet, no study in social
science has focused on them. Williams closes this knowledge gap
through ethnographic fieldwork, providing an in-depth analysis of
the daily life of superintendents in the lower Harlem area in New
York City.
"Picturing myself dying in a way I choose myself seems so
comforting, healing and heroic. I'd look at my wrists, watch the
blood seeping, and be a spectator in my last act of
self-determination. By having lost all my self-respect it seems
like the last pride I own, determining the time I die."-Kyra V.,
seventeen Reading the confessions of a teenager contemplating
suicide is uncomfortable, but we must do so to understand why
self-harm has become epidemic, especially in the United States.
What drives teenagers to self-harm? What makes death so attractive,
so liberating, and so inevitable for so many? In Teenage Suicide
Notes, sociologist Terry Williams pores over the writings of a
diverse group of troubled youths to better grasp the motivations
behind teenage suicide and to humanize those at risk of taking
their own lives. Williams evaluates young people in rural and urban
contexts and across lines of race, class, gender, and sexual
orientation. His approach, which combines sensitive portrayals with
sociological analysis, adds a clarifying dimension to the fickle
and often frustrating behavior of adolescents. Williams reads
between the lines of his subjects' seemingly straightforward
reflections on alienation, agency, euphoria, and loss, and
investigates how this cocktail of emotions can lead to suicide-or
not. Rather than treating these notes as exceptional examples of
self-expression, Williams situates them at the center of teenage
life, linking them to abuse, violence, depression, anxiety,
religion, peer pressure, sexual identity, and family dynamics. He
captures the currents that turn self-destruction into an act of
self-determination and proposes more effective solutions to
resolving the suicide crisis.
There is no rawer human experience than sex, and in a city as
diverse as New York, sexual experiences come in many forms. In the
pre-Giuliani days, temptation flooded Times Square on theater
marquees and neon signs. Behind unmarked doors downtown, more
adventurous experiences awaited for those in the know. In The Soft
City, the ethnographer Terry Williams, with the help of accomplices
and informants, ventures deep into the underground world of sex in
New York. The book explores different aspects of the "perverse
space" of the city: porn theaters, sex shops, peep shows, restroom
cruising, sadomasochism clubs, swingers' events, and many more.
Featuring field notes taken between 1975 and the present, The Soft
City documents the ways that New Yorkers on the social periphery
have thought about and pursued sex, whether for recreation or to
make a living. It also presents an unconventional account of New
York City's many transformations, showing how the soft city-its
people and their unique character-evolved in response to official
and social pressures. Featuring Williams's unmistakable portraits
of the demimonde as well as the accounts of other ethnographers
challenging themselves to dive into the city's hidden crannies, The
Soft City is as irreproducible as it is provocative.
The "after-hours club" is a fixture of the African American ghetto.
It is a semisecret, unlicensed "spot" where "regulars" and
"tourists" mingle with "hustlers" to buy and use drugs long after
regular bars are closed and the party has ended for the "squares."
After-hours clubs are found in most cities, but for people outside
of their particular milieu, they are formidably difficult to
identify and even more difficult to access. The sociologist Terry
Williams returns to the cocaine culture of Harlem in the 1980s and
'90s with an ethnographic account of a club he calls Le Boogie
Woogie. He explores the life of a cast of characters that includes
regulars and bar workers, dealers and hustlers, following social
interaction around the club's active bar, with its colorful staff
and owner and the "sniffers" who patronize it. In so doing,
Williams delves into the world of after-hours clubs, exploring
their longstanding function in the African American community as
neighborhood institutions and places of autonomy for people whom
mainstream society grants few spaces of freedom. He contrasts Le
Boogie Woogie, which he visited in the 1990s, with a Lower East
Side club, dubbed Murphy's Bar, twenty years later to show how
"cool" remains essential to those outside the margins of society
even as what it means to be "cool" changes. Le Boogie Woogie is an
exceptional ethnographic portrait of an underground culture and its
place within a changing city.
The "after-hours club" is a fixture of the African American ghetto.
It is a semisecret, unlicensed "spot" where "regulars" and
"tourists" mingle with "hustlers" to buy and use drugs long after
regular bars are closed and the party has ended for the "squares."
After-hours clubs are found in most cities, but for people outside
of their particular milieu, they are formidably difficult to
identify and even more difficult to access. The sociologist Terry
Williams returns to the cocaine culture of Harlem in the 1980s and
'90s with an ethnographic account of a club he calls Le Boogie
Woogie. He explores the life of a cast of characters that includes
regulars and bar workers, dealers and hustlers, following social
interaction around the club's active bar, with its colorful staff
and owner and the "sniffers" who patronize it. In so doing,
Williams delves into the world of after-hours clubs, exploring
their longstanding function in the African American community as
neighborhood institutions and places of autonomy for people whom
mainstream society grants few spaces of freedom. He contrasts Le
Boogie Woogie, which he visited in the 1990s, with a Lower East
Side club, dubbed Murphy's Bar, twenty years later to show how
"cool" remains essential to those outside the margins of society
even as what it means to be "cool" changes. Le Boogie Woogie is an
exceptional ethnographic portrait of an underground culture and its
place within a changing city.
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The Number (Paperback)
Terry Williams
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R299
R245
Discovery Miles 2 450
Save R54 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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An up-to-date reference for managing thyroid and parathyroid
diseases Thyroid and Parathyroid Diseases, Second Edition, has been
revised and updated to reflect recent advances in the medical and
surgical management of thyroid and parathyroid diseases. This new
edition serves as both a comprehensive guide to patient evaluation
as well as an atlas of advanced surgical techniques for managing
patients needing operative intervention. Separate chapters are
devoted to minimally invasive techniques and remote access/robotic
thyroidectomy techniques, both of which have enjoyed increased
application throughout the world. New in the second edition: A
section on state-of-the-art, evidence-based management of
challenging parathyroid conditions such as multiple endocrine
neoplasia and renal hyperparathyroidism A more detailed discussion
of thyroid cancer evaluation and staging A new chapter dedicated to
parathyroid cancer Nearly 200 additional full-color illustrations
This new edition is a valuable resource for all surgeons,
endocrinologists, and residents seeking to expand their knowledge
of thyroid and parathyroid diseases, as well as seasoned clinicians
who want to improve patient care and incorporate the latest
surgical advancements into their practice.
This vivid account of hustling in New York City explores the
sociological reasons why con artists play their game and the
psychological tricks they use to win it. Terry Williams and Trevor
B. Milton, two prominent sociologists and ethnographers, spent
years with New York con artists to uncover their secrets. The
result is an unprecedented view into how con games operate, whether
in back alleys and side streets or in police precincts and Wall
Street boiler rooms. Whether it's selling bootleg goods, playing
the numbers, squatting rent-free, scamming tourists with bogus
stories, selling knockoffs on Canal Street, or crafting Ponzi
schemes, con artists use verbal persuasion, physical misdirection,
and sheer charm to convince others to do what they want. Williams
and Milton examine this act of performance art and find meaning in
its methods to exact bounty from unsuspecting tourists and ordinary
New Yorkers alike. Through their sophisticated exploration of the
personal experiences and influences that create a successful
hustler, they build a portrait of unusual emotional and
psychological depth. Their work also offers a new take on structure
and opportunity, showing how the city's unique urban and social
architecture lends itself to the perfect con.
This vivid account of hustling in New York City explores the
sociological reasons why con artists play their game and the
psychological tricks they use to win it. Terry Williams and Trevor
B. Milton, two prominent sociologists and ethnographers, spent
years with New York con artists to uncover their secrets. The
result is an unprecedented view into how con games operate, whether
in back alleys and side streets or in police precincts and Wall
Street boiler rooms. Whether it's selling bootleg goods, playing
the numbers, squatting rent-free, scamming tourists with bogus
stories, selling knockoffs on Canal Street, or crafting Ponzi
schemes, con artists use verbal persuasion, physical misdirection,
and sheer charm to convince others to do what they want. Williams
and Milton examine this act of performance art and find meaning in
its methods to exact bounty from unsuspecting tourists and ordinary
New Yorkers alike. Through their sophisticated exploration of the
personal experiences and influences that create a successful
hustler, they build a portrait of unusual emotional and
psychological depth. Their work also offers a new take on structure
and opportunity, showing how the city's unique urban and social
architecture lends itself to the perfect con.
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