Behind Ghetto Walls

Regular price €179.80
A01=Lee Rainwater
A01=Michael Novak
adolescent peer dynamics
African American urban studies
Author_Lee Rainwater
Author_Michael Novak
Black Ass
boy
Boy Friend Relationship
Category=JHB
class
Conjugal Role Segregation
Dead Beat
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family socialization
Fun Boat
Girl Friends
Good American Life
Good Life
IBM Card
Internal Revenue Service
Large Families
Lee Rainwater
lower
Lower Class Culture
Lower Class Negro
Lower Class Negro Children
Lower Class Negro Families
Lower Class Negroes
Lower Class People
Lower Class Persons
Lower Class Subculture
negro
nuclear family structure
people
Pre-marital Pregnancy
Pruitt Igoe Projects
public housing research
slum community ethnography
St Louis Area
Substitute Games
urban sociology
Valid Identity
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138519404
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book is about the family lives of some 10,000 children and adults who live in an all-Negro public housing project in St Louis. The Pruitt-Igoe project is only one of the many environments in which urban Negro Americans lived in the 1960s, but the character of the family life there shares much with the family life of lower-class Negroes as it has been described by other investigators in other cities and at other times, in Harlem, Chicago, New Orleans, or Washington D.C. This book is primarily concerned with private life as it is lived from day to day in a federally built and supported slum. The questions, which are treated here, have to do with the kinds of interpersonal relationships that develop in nuclear families, the socialization processes that operate in families as children grow up in a slum environment, the informal relationships of children and adolescents and adults with each other, and, finally, the world views (the existential framework) arising from the life experiences of the Pruitt-Igoeans and the ways they make use of this framework to order their experiences and make sense out of them. The lives of these persons are examined in terms of life cycles. Each child there is born into a constricted world, the world of lower class, Negro existence, and as he grows he is shaped and directed by that existence through the day-to-day experiences and relationships available to him. The crucial transition from child of a family; to progenitor of a new family begins in adolescence, and for this reason the book pays particular attention to how each new generation of parents expresses the cultural and social structural forces that formed it and continue to constrain its behavior. This book, in short, is about intimate personal life in a particular ghetto setting. It does not analyze the larger institutional, social structural, and ideological forces that provide the social, economic, and political context in which lower-class Negro life is lived. These larger macro sociological forces are treated in another volume based on research in the Pruitt-Igoe community. However, this book does draw on the large body of literature on the structural position of Negroes in American society as background for its analysis of Pruitt-Igoe private life.