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 : King Kong On 4th Street: Families And The Violence Of Poverty On The Lower East Side (Institutional Structures of Feeling)

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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 306.85097471
EAN: 9780813329376
ISBN: 081332937X
Label: Westview Press
Manufacturer: Westview Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 272
Publication Date: November 21, 1997
Publisher: Westview Press
Studio: Westview Press




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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
In King Kong on 4th Street, Jagna Sharff chronicles an ethnographic team’s involvement over a span of fifteen years with the people of a poor, largely Puerto Rican neighborhood in New York City. Anchoring her observations in field notes, she recounts the joys, fears, and disappointments of daily life as well as the drama of large events. Arson, the murder of a popular local teenager, the mobbing of a grocery store as an act of retribution for his death—all are projected onto a canvas of shifting local and national policies toward poor people and neighborhoods.Sharff provides new insights into gender and family roles, how adaptations to available resources from the welfare state may shape the membership of households, and how children may be trained for specific adult roles that will advance the family’s well-being. She also reveals how the underground economy, particularly the commerce in drugs whose profits are realized outside of the neighborhood, undermines neighborhood-wide solidarity and sends people scrambling against one another for jobs in the quasi-licit and illicit sector.Following the lives of a number of families into the next generation, Sharff’s ethnographic team documents how external political decisions that change the war on poverty into a war on the poor affected them. Paramilitary sweeps of the neighborhood, in tandem with gentrification and declining social services, produce severe dislocations and relocation to homeless shelters, welfare hotels, and prisons. But the reality described is not all grim.The book’s vivid style shows that life is more than grim reality. People get real pleasure from raising children and taking part in the human drama around them. Kinfolk, real and fictive, keep each other afloat and reconnected to new neighborhoods and opportunities, including that of upward mobility through religious conversion. Adults and children achieve satisfaction and a measure of security through grit, wit, and acts of heroism and solidarity.




Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Tedious and Pointless
As an ethnographic anthropological researcher, Sharff should know better than others how to properly conduct an ethnography and offer valuable research to her audience. In documenting the tragedy and drama of the poverty-stricken individuals she is studying, Sharff believes that simply regurgitating their lives moment-by-moment qualifies as significant. At the very least a reader should be able to identify the problem she is reseaching, the goals of her research, and why it might be significant. ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A Moving Analysis of the Forces Shaping a Poor Neighborhood
Jagna Sharff is an anthropologist who spent several years in the early 70s living in a poor Puerto Rican neighborhood in the Lower East Side before arson and gentrification forced the poor out. In vivid, cinematic style, Sharff analyzes the different forces at work in the decline of the families in the neighborhood: the loss of manufacturing in the region throws men out of work; rules governing payments in Aid to Dependent Families break up marriages; cheap drugs flood the streets, providing a ... Read More







 






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