'Yasushi Watanabe has achieved a sympathetic yet trenchant analysis of the American boast of having achieved a happy fusion of individualism with democracy.' Michael Herzfeld, Professor of Anthropology, Harvard University 'A Harvard-educated Japanese anthropologist takes a fresh look at two communities that are undergoing similar fragmentation: the lower-middle-class Irish of South Boston, and the descendents of the upper-class Boston Brahmins. He deftly contrasts the transformation of their respective collective identities and helps us understand how the two groups now interpret their history and traditions. Thus, we understand better the restructuring that American class cultures have undergone in recent decades. This illuminating book will be particularly useful in courses on inequality, community, and culture in the United States.' Michèle Lamont, Professor of Sociology, Harvard Universityf 'A fascinating look inside the lives of Boston's elite and working class families. Only a stranger's eyes could discern the cultural contours of resignation and hope that social change has visited on the descendants of the Boston's Brahmins and Irish immigrants. . . . A magnificent contribution to our understanding of social change and class culture, seen from the inside of his subjects' lives.' Katherine Newman, Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs, Princeton University 'Watanabe has managed to cast new light on this important topic by his superb ethnography of . . . the contemporary descendants of Brahmin lineages and the sorts of local culture and influence that they have engendered. . . . Watanabe has provided insights and material that will be indispensable to American studies in the broadest terms.' George E. Marcus, Professor of Anthropology, Rice University White, middle-class Americans are one of the most understudied groups in the anthropology of the United States - perhaps because of their hegemonic prese
Be the first to review this book!
Discover more books in the same category