Hustlers, Beats, and Others

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A Study In Historical Sociology*
A01=James W. VanStone
A01=Ned Polsky
adult criminal behavior
alfred
Author_James W. VanStone
Author_Ned Polsky
Beat Writers
billiard
Billiard Games
Billiard Players
Billiard Playing
Billiard Room
Billiard Tables
Category=JKV
Category=JMH
clyde
Criminology Textbooks
deviance theory
deviant occupations research
empirical sociology
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Erotic Book
ethnographic fieldwork
Follow
Gentleman's Game
Gentleman’s Game
Hoi Polloi
Juvenile Delinquents
kinsey
Marihuana Smokers
martin
ned
playing
Pocket Billiards
pomeroy
Pool Hustlers
Poolroom Hustler
Pornographic Books
room
Sex Instruction Manual
social norms transgression
subcultural analysis
Vice Versa
Village Coffee Shops
Violated
Vito Genovese
wardell
White Beats
William King
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202308876
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Apr 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Ranging from pool hustling to pornography, this book analyzes deviant branches of American life, dispels misconceptions about them, and throws new light on sociological theory and method. Each chapter radically dissents from one or more mainstream opinions about deviance.

The first chapter examines the alleged causes for the decline of American poolrooms and finds them wanting, traces the rise and fall of poolrooms to historical changes in America's social structure, and cogently dissects the recent poolroom revival. The second chapter, reports a field study of a deviant occupation, pool hustling, describing the hustler's work situation and career from recruitment to retirement. In revealing how pool hustlers, although dedicated wholly to a vocation that merely breaks unenforced gambling laws, frequently supplement their income by means of outright felonies, the author develops a new theory of "crime as moonlighting." The third chapter sharply criticizes our criminology textbooks for avoiding the study of uncaught adult criminals in their natural environments. It demonstrates such research to be both necessary and practical with career felons as well as moonlighters. The author describes field techniques he has used with career felons, offers new findings gleaned by means of these techniques, and answers moral objections to such research. The forth chapter presents the first genuinely empirical study of the beat delinquent sub-culture, in which the author corrects some journalistic views such as that most beats are exhibitionists and some sociological ones such as that "retreatist" drug-users can meet neither legitimate nor criminal success norms. The final chapter, on the sociology of pornography, holds that the courts are wrong to claim that naturalistic erotic art is non-pornographic, and wronger still to claim that hard-core pornography is, in Mr. Justice Brennan's words, "utterly without redeeming social importance."

The author's unusual blend of empirical, theoretical, and methodological contributions to the study of deviance is enlivened by a witty yet disputatious style, for Mr. Polsky believes that polemical scholarship improves the quality of intellectual life by forcing genteel discussion to become genuine debate.

Ned Polsky (1928-2000) was a professor of sociology at the State University of New York, Stony Brook.

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