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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Amanda I. SeligmanPublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 1.60cm , Height: 0.20cm , Length: 2.40cm Weight: 0.539kg ISBN: 9780226385716ISBN 10: 022638571 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 04 October 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews""Insistently local in its focus. . .Offers microlevel detail and archival documentation that makes it almost like primary source material. . .The book's strength is in meticulously documenting the ""persistent efforts of residents to control their environment"" and their resolve to do so with others.""-- ""Journal of Urban Affairs"" ""Meticulously researched and highly instructive. . .Boldly venturing into a shadowy domain of urban life that has left scant and scattered documentation, Seligman picks needles from haystacks to gather data on hundreds of clubs whose varied histories, taken together, enable her to illuminate the larger stories of how residents related to municipal government and how they organized and acted collectively to manage their environs. . . .Seligman delivers on her promises, providing fresh and important insights into the politics of everyday life in the American city.""-- ""Journal of American History"" ""Most scholars ignore the lowly block club. Seligman remedies that oversight in her magisterial account of their history and importance in Chicago. . . . She proves that Chicago and urban history more generally need to be rewritten to include these clubs that 'make strangers into neighbors.' Like community organizations and political movements, they should not be overlooked by scholars, city planners, or community organizers.""-- ""Dick W. Simpson, University of Illinois at Chicago"" ""Through Seligman's pioneering use of documents and archival materials she uncovers, for example, the role of the National Urban League in furnishing the encouragement and template for many block clubs in Chicago. More than that, her research reveals the ways in which block clubs pulled together disparate neighbors and formed them into clubs to pursue a variety of goals: beautification; parties and gatherings; neighborhood protection; and a way for integrating strangers into the life of the city. She puts flesh on the bones of social networks, showing how and why they form, and how they have come to constitute the essential social foundations of organized life in the city.""-- ""Anthony Orum, University of Illinois at Chicago"" ""Chicago's Block Clubs is a one-of-a-kind study of a mostly overlooked yet almost ubiquitous feature of American urban life. These little groups of neighbors are everywhere, filling in where governments--or the people next door--fall short when it comes to keeping up appearances. Until now their very nature shielded them from the eyes of historians and social scientists. Block clubs are small. They come and go. They are hyper-local in their concerns, and they are almost completely absent from grand policy debates and partisan political jousting. Instead, they regulate everyday life. They defend their neighborhood when it is up, and spring into action when it is down. They encourage neat lawns, fresh coats of paint, and respectable public behavior. By filling the gap between private priorities at home and the public responsibilities of government they are an important component of the 'civil society' which lubricates the joints of democracy, keeping it creaking along. Small, it turns out, can frequently be beautiful.""-- ""Wesley G. Skogan, Northwestern University"" Insistently local in its focus. . .Offers microlevel detail and archival documentation that makes it almost like primary source material. . .The book's strength is in meticulously documenting the persistent efforts of residents to control their environment and their resolve to do so with others. -- Journal of Urban Affairs Meticulously researched and highly instructive. . .Boldly venturing into a shadowy domain of urban life that has left scant and scattered documentation, Seligman picks needles from haystacks to gather data on hundreds of clubs whose varied histories, taken together, enable her to illuminate the larger stories of how residents related to municipal government and how they organized and acted collectively to manage their environs. . . .Seligman delivers on her promises, providing fresh and important insights into the politics of everyday life in the American city. -- Journal of American History Most scholars ignore the lowly block club. Seligman remedies that oversight in her magisterial account of their history and importance in Chicago. . . . She proves that Chicago and urban history more generally need to be rewritten to include these clubs that 'make strangers into neighbors.' Like community organizations and political movements, they should not be overlooked by scholars, city planners, or community organizers. -- Dick W. Simpson, University of Illinois at Chicago Through Seligman's pioneering use of documents and archival materials she uncovers, for example, the role of the National Urban League in furnishing the encouragement and template for many block clubs in Chicago. More than that, her research reveals the ways in which block clubs pulled together disparate neighbors and formed them into clubs to pursue a variety of goals: beautification; parties and gatherings; neighborhood protection; and a way for integrating strangers into the life of the city. She puts flesh on the bones of social networks, showing how and why they form, and how they have come to constitute the essential social foundations of organized life in the city. -- Anthony Orum, University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago's Block Clubs is a one-of-a-kind study of a mostly overlooked yet almost ubiquitous feature of American urban life. These little groups of neighbors are everywhere, filling in where governments--or the people next door--fall short when it comes to keeping up appearances. Until now their very nature shielded them from the eyes of historians and social scientists. Block clubs are small. They come and go. They are hyper-local in their concerns, and they are almost completely absent from grand policy debates and partisan political jousting. Instead, they regulate everyday life. They defend their neighborhood when it is up, and spring into action when it is down. They encourage neat lawns, fresh coats of paint, and respectable public behavior. By filling the gap between private priorities at home and the public responsibilities of government they are an important component of the 'civil society' which lubricates the joints of democracy, keeping it creaking along. Small, it turns out, can frequently be beautiful. -- Wesley G. Skogan, Northwestern University Meticulously researched and highly instructive. . .Boldly venturing into a shadowy domain of urban life that has left scant and scattered documentation, Seligman picks needles from haystacks to gather data on hundreds of clubs whose varied histories, taken together, enable her to illuminate the larger stories of how residents related to municipal government and how they organized and acted collectively to manage their environs. . . .Seligman delivers on her promises, providing fresh and important insights into the politics of everyday life in the American city. --Journal of American History Insistently local in its focus. . .Offers microlevel detail and archival documentation that makes it almost like primary source material. . .The book's strength is in meticulously documenting the persistent efforts of residents to control their environment and their resolve to do so with others. --Journal of Urban Affairs Through Seligman's pioneering use of documents and archival materials she uncovers, for example, the role of the National Urban League in furnishing the encouragement and template for many block clubs in Chicago. More than that, her research reveals the ways in which block clubs pulled together disparate neighbors and formed them into clubs to pursue a variety of goals: beautification; parties and gatherings; neighborhood protection; and a way for integrating strangers into the life of the city. She puts flesh on the bones of social networks, showing how and why they form, and how they have come to constitute the essential social foundations of organized life in the city. --Anthony Orum, University of Illinois at Chicago Most scholars ignore the lowly block club. Seligman remedies that oversight in her magisterial account of their history and importance in Chicago. . . . She proves that Chicago and urban history more generally need to be rewritten to include these clubs that 'make strangers into neighbors.' Like community organizations and political movements, they should not be overlooked by scholars, city planners, or community organizers. --Dick W. Simpson, University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago's Block Clubs is a one-of-a-kind study of a mostly overlooked yet almost ubiquitous feature of American urban life. These little groups of neighbors are everywhere, filling in where governments--or the people next door--fall short when it comes to keeping up appearances. Until now their very nature shielded them from the eyes of historians and social scientists. Block clubs are small. They come and go. They are hyper-local in their concerns, and they are almost completely absent from grand policy debates and partisan political jousting. Instead, they regulate everyday life. They defend their neighborhood when it is up, and spring into action when it is down. They encourage neat lawns, fresh coats of paint, and respectable public behavior. By filling the gap between private priorities at home and the public responsibilities of government they are an important component of the 'civil society' which lubricates the joints of democracy, keeping it creaking along. Small, it turns out, can frequently be beautiful. --Wesley G. Skogan, Northwestern University Author InformationAmanda I. Seligman is professor of history and urban studies at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. She is the author of Block by Block: Neighborhoods and Public Policy on Chicago's West Side and is an editor of the Historical Studies of Urban America series. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |