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Living Black: Social Life in an African American Neighborhood Mark S. Fleisher
Living Black: Social Life in an African American Neighborhood
Mark S. Fleisher
Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Table of Contents: Acknowledgments Prologue 1 The Ethnographer and the Ex-Convict 2 Culture and Social Life 3 Lively Streets 4 Everyday Life 5 New Neighbors 6 Dreams and Realities 7 Rebirth Days 8 They Don t Need a Savior Epilogue Notes References Index "Biographical Note: Mark S. Fleisher is a research professor in the Jack, Joseph, and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences at Case Western Reserve University. He formerly worked at the Federal Bureau of Prisons and at Illinois State University. He is the author of "Beggars and Thieves," "Dead End Kids," and "Warehousing Violence."Publisher Marketing: Despite real poverty, the community described in "Living Black"-the historic North End of Champaign, Illinois-is truly a neighborhood, with a vibrant social life, wide-ranging friendships, and strong ties between youth and adults and among multiple generations of community residents, lending a hand to neighbors in need. But it operates on its own terms-valuing non-judgmental attitudes and individualism, and stressing acceptance of the consequences of personal behavior. Teenage mothers aren't derided, adolescents who drop out of school aren't ridiculed, and parolees and ex-cons aren't scorned. The North End was settled in the late nineteenth century by descendants of slaves who were seeking employment at the local university. Anthropologist Mark Fleisher offers a window into its daily life at the end of the twentieth century, particularly through the stories of Mo and Memphis Washington, who fight to sustain a stable home for their children, and of Burpee, a local man who has returned to the North End to rebuild his life after years of crime and punishment in Chicago. "Living Black" is based on six years of Fleisher's first-hand participant observation in the North End. Earlier studies of the North End, conducted by black graduate students at the University of Illinois in the 1930s and 1960s, indicate that the community Fleisher found in the 1990s carried forward out of slavery a culture of resilience, intergenerational social and economic support, an ability to cope with and adjust to conditions of privation, and a climate of positive interracial relationships between the North End's black residents and the predominantly white university community and local law enforcement agencies. Contributor Bio: Fleisher, Mark S Fleisher is a cultural anthropologist.
| Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
| Released | November 30, 2015 |
| ISBN13 | 9780299305345 |
| Publishers | University of Wisconsin Press |
| Genre | Ethnic Orientation > African American |
| Pages | 176 |
| Dimensions | 152 × 228 × 9 mm · 200 g |
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