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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Waverly Duck , A01Publisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 1.70cm , Height: 0.10cm , Length: 2.30cm Weight: 0.312kg ISBN: 9780226298061ISBN 10: 022629806 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 19 September 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsDuck's research undeniably enriches the urban sociology and delinquency literature. The distinction that he outlines between the cultural codes of a neighborhood and its inhabitants' personal values is particularly interesting. Indeed, several examples of empirical research measure culture by interrogating individual beliefs, interpreting expected social practices as what people really want for themselves. --European Journal of Sociology No Way Out provides a sophisticated, nuanced, theoretical, and pragmatic understanding of lived experiences and social processes in a criminalized African American community. . . . It is a must-read for students of urban ethnography. Duck teaches us how to develop knowledge from multiple vantage points about the multiple realities that our participants live and experience; he teaches us to reflect critically on our positionality as knowledge producers, narrators, and theory creators; and he gives us a lesson in developing research with a purpose that is translational and aims to improve the conditions of the populations we study. . . . No Way Out gives us a solid way in. It teaches us to be nuanced and multidimensional about our research with marginalized populations, while giving us conceptual tools to continue to develop and build on as we move forward in our endeavor to understand justice, inequality, social process, and social change. --Contemporary Sociology Original, thickly described, and well-written, No Way Out powerfully represents a world that outsiders rarely view up-close. Duck is the consummate urban ethnographer; he puts you there. Nothing short of brilliant--this book is a remarkable achievement, and will become an enduring contribution to the urban literature. --Elijah Anderson, author of Code of the Street and The Cosmopolitan Canopy With skill, sagacity, and sensitivity, Duck delves beneath the hype that dominates perceptions of neighborhoods with street-based drug markets and sheds new light on the residents of one such area with evocative depth and complexity. Through this lucid portrait of daily life forged under the unfathomably harsh conditions of poverty in America, we come to understand the individual and collective strategies people develop to bear the unbearable by creating a sense of order and community. Yet resilience and fortitude cannot conquer the powerful societal forces that keep generation after generation confined to these oppressive territories. No Way Out is a haunting, thought-provoking read that lingers long after we turn the final page. --Megan Comfort, author of Doing Time Together: Love and Family in the Shadow of the Prison Remarkably original. No Way Out is deeply infused with knowledge of the ethnographic literature that has identified today's still acute policy issues in poor, urban, mostly black--and often crime-ridden--communities. To read this book is to be assaulted by the realities of Bristol Hill--and other places like it--and to become aware of the fine lines binding the heroic to the tragic in the lives of its people. No Way Out does what few other books of its kind do. It makes multiple contributions to the scholarship, while telling the stories of Bristol Hill in a way that is plain for anyone to understand. --Charles Lemert, senior fellow, Urban Ethnography Project, Yale University Waverly Duck is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Pittsburgh. Duck's research undeniably enriches the urban sociology and delinquency literature. The distinction that he outlines between the cultural codes of a neighborhood and its inhabitants' personal values is particularly interesting. Indeed, several examples of empirical research measure culture by interrogating individual beliefs, interpreting expected social practices as what people really want for themselves. --European Journal of Sociology No Way Out provides a sophisticated, nuanced, theoretical, and pragmatic understanding of lived experiences and social processes in a criminalized African American community. . . . It is a must-read for students of urban ethnography. Duck teaches us how to develop knowledge from multiple vantage points about the multiple realities that our participants live and experience; he teaches us to reflect critically on our positionality as knowledge producers, narrators, and theory creators; and he gives us a lesson in developing research with a purpose that is translational and aims to improve the conditions of the populations we study. . . . No Way Out gives us a solid way in. It teaches us to be nuanced and multidimensional about our research with marginalized populations, while giving us conceptual tools to continue to develop and build on as we move forward in our endeavor to understand justice, inequality, social process, and social change. --Contemporary Sociology With skill, sagacity, and sensitivity, Duck delves beneath the hype that dominates perceptions of neighborhoods with street-based drug markets and sheds new light on the residents of one such area with evocative depth and complexity. Through this lucid portrait of daily life forged under the unfathomably harsh conditions of poverty in America, we come to understand the individual and collective strategies people develop to bear the unbearable by creating a sense of order and community. Yet resilience and fortitude cannot conquer the powerful societal forces that keep generation after generation confined to these oppressive territories. No Way Out is a haunting, thought-provoking read that lingers long after we turn the final page. --Megan Comfort, author of Doing Time Together: Love and Family in the Shadow of the Prison Original, thickly described, and well-written, No Way Out powerfully represents a world that outsiders rarely view up-close. Duck is the consummate urban ethnographer; he puts you there. Nothing short of brilliant--this book is a remarkable achievement, and will become an enduring contribution to the urban literature. --Elijah Anderson, author of Code of the Street and The Cosmopolitan Canopy Remarkably original. No Way Out is deeply infused with knowledge of the ethnographic literature that has identified today's still acute policy issues in poor, urban, mostly black--and often crime-ridden--communities. To read this book is to be assaulted by the realities of Bristol Hill--and other places like it--and to become aware of the fine lines binding the heroic to the tragic in the lives of its people. No Way Out does what few other books of its kind do. It makes multiple contributions to the scholarship, while telling the stories of Bristol Hill in a way that is plain for anyone to understand. --Charles Lemert, senior fellow, Urban Ethnography Project, Yale University Duck's research undeniably enriches the urban sociology and delinquency literature. The distinction that he outlines between the cultural codes of a neighborhood and its inhabitants' personal values is particularly interesting. Indeed, several examples of empirical research measure culture by interrogating individual beliefs, interpreting expected social practices as what people really want for themselves. --European Journal of Sociology With skill, sagacity, and sensitivity, Duck delves beneath the hype that dominates perceptions of neighborhoods with street-based drug markets and sheds new light on the residents of one such area with evocative depth and complexity. Through this lucid portrait of daily life forged under the unfathomably harsh conditions of poverty in America, we come to understand the individual and collective strategies people develop to bear the unbearable by creating a sense of order and community. Yet resilience and fortitude cannot conquer the powerful societal forces that keep generation after generation confined to these oppressive territories. No Way Out is a haunting, thought-provoking read that lingers long after we turn the final page. --Megan Comfort, author of Doing Time Together: Love and Family in the Shadow of the Prison Original, thickly described, and well-written, No Way Out powerfully represents a world that outsiders rarely view up-close. Duck is the consummate urban ethnographer; he puts you there. Nothing short of brilliant--this book is a remarkable achievement, and will become an enduring contribution to the urban literature. --Elijah Anderson, author of Code of the Street and The Cosmopolitan Canopy Remarkably original. No Way Out is deeply infused with knowledge of the ethnographic literature that has identified today's still acute policy issues in poor, urban, mostly black--and often crime-ridden--communities. To read this book is to be assaulted by the realities of Bristol Hill--and other places like it--and to become aware of the fine lines binding the heroic to the tragic in the lives of its people. No Way Out does what few other books of its kind do. It makes multiple contributions to the scholarship, while telling the stories of Bristol Hill in a way that is plain for anyone to understand. --Charles Lemert, senior fellow, Urban Ethnography Project, Yale University No Way Out provides a sophisticated, nuanced, theoretical, and pragmatic understanding of lived experiences and social processes in a criminalized African American community. . . . It is a must-read for students of urban ethnography. Duck teaches us how to develop knowledge from multiple vantage points about the multiple realities that our participants live and experience; he teaches us to reflect critically on our positionality as knowledge producers, narrators, and theory creators; and he gives us a lesson in developing research with a purpose that is translational and aims to improve the conditions of the populations we study. . . . No Way Out gives us a solid way in. It teaches us to be nuanced and multidimensional about our research with marginalized populations, while giving us conceptual tools to continue to develop and build on as we move forward in our endeavor to understand justice, inequality, social process, and social change. --Contemporary Sociology Duck's research undeniably enriches the urban sociology and delinquency literature. The distinction that he outlines between the cultural codes of a neighborhood and its inhabitants' personal values is particularly interesting. Indeed, several examples of empirical research measure culture by interrogating individual beliefs, interpreting expected social practices as what people really want for themselves. --European Journal of Sociology Remarkably original. No Way Out is deeply infused with knowledge of the ethnographic literature that has identified today's still acute policy issues in poor, urban, mostly black--and often crime-ridden--communities. To read this book is to be assaulted by the realities of Bristol Hill--and other places like it--and to become aware of the fine lines binding the heroic to the tragic in the lives of its people. No Way Out does what few other books of its kind do. It makes multiple contributions to the scholarship, while telling the stories of Bristol Hill in a way that is plain for anyone to understand. --Charles Lemert, senior fellow, Urban Ethnography Project, Yale University No Way Out provides a sophisticated, nuanced, theoretical, and pragmatic understanding of lived experiences and social processes in a criminalized African American community. . . . It is a must-read for students of urban ethnography. Duck teaches us how to develop knowledge from multiple vantage points about the multiple realities that our participants live and experience; he teaches us to reflect critically on our positionality as knowledge producers, narrators, and theory creators; and he gives us a lesson in developing research with a purpose that is translational and aims to improve the conditions of the populations we study. . . . No Way Out gives us a solid way in. It teaches us to be nuanced and multidimensional about our research with marginalized populations, while giving us conceptual tools to continue to develop and build on as we move forward in our endeavor to understand justice, inequality, social process, and social change. --Contemporary Sociology With skill, sagacity, and sensitivity, Duck delves beneath the hype that dominates perceptions of neighborhoods with street-based drug markets and sheds new light on the residents of one such area with evocative depth and complexity. Through this lucid portrait of daily life forged under the unfathomably harsh conditions of poverty in America, we come to understand the individual and collective strategies people develop to bear the unbearable by creating a sense of order and community. Yet resilience and fortitude cannot conquer the powerful societal forces that keep generation after generation confined to these oppressive territories. No Way Out is a haunting, thought-provoking read that lingers long after we turn the final page. --Megan Comfort, author of Doing Time Together: Love and Family in the Shadow of the Prison Original, thickly described, and well-written, No Way Out powerfully represents a world that outsiders rarely view up-close. Duck is the consummate urban ethnographer; he puts you there. Nothing short of brilliant--this book is a remarkable achievement, and will become an enduring contribution to the urban literature. --Elijah Anderson, author of Code of the Street and The Cosmopolitan Canopy Author InformationWaverly Duck is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Pittsburgh. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |