Racial Situations: Class Predicaments of Whiteness in Detroit

Author:   John Hartigan, Jr.
Publisher:   Princeton University Press
ISBN:  

9780691028866


Pages:   360
Publication Date:   24 October 1999
Replaced By:   9780691028859
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


Our Price $184.80 Quantity:  
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Racial Situations: Class Predicaments of Whiteness in Detroit


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Full Product Details

Author:   John Hartigan, Jr.
Publisher:   Princeton University Press
Imprint:   Princeton University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 19.70cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 25.40cm
Weight:   0.680kg
ISBN:  

9780691028866


ISBN 10:   0691028869
Pages:   360
Publication Date:   24 October 1999
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Replaced By:   9780691028859
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

Language:   English

Table of Contents

Reviews

A sobering examination of the tangled web of race, class, and struggles over space.--Choice Drawing on rich comparative ethnography and subtle theorizing, Racial Situations is a timely reflection on major changes in the contemporary United States. The book makes an important contribution to theoretical and conceptual work on race and class in the various disciplines that converge around cultural studies and also provides this vital and contested field with further evidence of the value to be gained from innovative ethnographic research. --Roger Rouse, University of California, Davis John Hartigan is a terrific listener and an insightful thinker, and this book shows why both are important. In an era of seemingly inescapable racial thinking in this country, Hartigan asks us to notice how and when 'race' matters, and to be open to the possibility that some situations will surprise us. Richly nuanced and wonderfully peopled, this book is also courageous. It conveys compassion and understanding even when we might just expect criticism. Compelling, at times even gripping, this is a book I am very glad to have read. --Virginia Dom nguez, University of Iowa John Hartigan's distinctive ethnography will propel white readers across boundaries that they might prefer not to acknowledge. He effects a crucial move, long hoped for in 'whiteness studies'-a critical examination of liberal notions of race through a confrontation with whites' own despised 'others.' --George Marcus, Rice University Racial Situations is an innovative and theoretically sophisticated study of the process of racial formation among white residents of urban Detroit. Hartigan's ethnographic material is vivid and compelling and yields an uncompromisingly complex view of how whiteness is lived in American society. This book makes a major contribution to our understanding of the dynamic interplay of race, class, and culture in the everyday lives of urban residents. --Steven Gregory, Columbia University This is an excellent book that ought to be widely read . . . Substantively important, theoretically sophisticated, and full of unforgettable characters.---Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Contemporary Sociology This inventive, impressive [book] . . . contributes to the reorientation of studies of white identity . . . [It will] reward historians who venture into this ambitious anthropological account.---David Roediger, Journal of American Ethnic History Hartigan is a good storyteller . . . and a clear analyst of how local residents, black and white, make sense of race as it affects their lives and their sometimes desperate attempts to make do in this impoverished bit of the city. . . . By asking us to see race and class in different ways, this book helps us to imagine a world where such categories might be meaningless or superseded, even as it immerses us in the intractable, dangerous and hurtful relationships these fields of inequality perpetuate around us.---Marc Christensen, Metro Times Detroit


A sobering examination of the tangled web of race, class, and struggles over space.--Choice Drawing on rich comparative ethnography and subtle theorizing, Racial Situations is a timely reflection on major changes in the contemporary United States. The book makes an important contribution to theoretical and conceptual work on race and class in the various disciplines that converge around cultural studies and also provides this vital and contested field with further evidence of the value to be gained from innovative ethnographic research. --Roger Rouse, University of California, Davis John Hartigan is a terrific listener and an insightful thinker, and this book shows why both are important. In an era of seemingly inescapable racial thinking in this country, Hartigan asks us to notice how and when 'race' matters, and to be open to the possibility that some situations will surprise us. Richly nuanced and wonderfully peopled, this book is also courageous. It conveys compassion and understanding even when we might just expect criticism. Compelling, at times even gripping, this is a book I am very glad to have read. --Virginia Dom nguez, University of Iowa John Hartigan's distinctive ethnography will propel white readers across boundaries that they might prefer not to acknowledge. He effects a crucial move, long hoped for in 'whiteness studies'-a critical examination of liberal notions of race through a confrontation with whites' own despised 'others.' --George Marcus, Rice University Racial Situations is an innovative and theoretically sophisticated study of the process of racial formation among white residents of urban Detroit. Hartigan's ethnographic material is vivid and compelling and yields an uncompromisingly complex view of how whiteness is lived in American society. This book makes a major contribution to our understanding of the dynamic interplay of race, class, and culture in the everyday lives of urban residents. --Steven Gregory, Columbia University This is an excellent book that ought to be widely read . . . Substantively important, theoretically sophisticated, and full of unforgettable characters.---Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Contemporary Sociology Hartigan is a good storyteller . . . and a clear analyst of how local residents, black and white, make sense of race as it affects their lives and their sometimes desperate attempts to make do in this impoverished bit of the city. . . . By asking us to see race and class in different ways, this book helps us to imagine a world where such categories might be meaningless or superseded, even as it immerses us in the intractable, dangerous and hurtful relationships these fields of inequality perpetuate around us.---Marc Christensen, Metro Times Detroit This inventive, impressive [book] . . . contributes to the reorientation of studies of white identity . . . [It will] reward historians who venture into this ambitious anthropological account.---David Roediger, Journal of American Ethnic History


This is an excellent book that ought to be widely read . . . Substantively important, theoretically sophisticated, and full of unforgettable characters.


Author Information

John Hartigan Jr. is Assistant Professor in the Institute of Anthropology at the University of North Texas. His work on ""white trash"" and the ""white underclass"" has been published in a range of journals and edited volumes.

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