Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality
Breaking with the exoticizing cast of public discourse and conventional research, "Urban Outcasts" takes the reader inside the black ghetto of Chicago and the deindustrializing banlieue of Paris to discover that urban marginality is not everywhere the same. Drawing on a wealth of original field, survey and historical data, Loic Wacquant shows that the involution ...more
Hardcover, 360 pages
Published
June 11th 2007
by Polity Press
(first published 2001)
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Solid on issues of both race and economics, this is a great book to take you outside the American experience and look back in. It is the American experience I am focusing on for my own research, so this review is one sided even though I fully accept Wacquant's critique of such a focus. I felt less bad about it, as in my own opinion, the comparison of American ghettos and the French banlieux reveals there is no real comparison, interesting as the two are. What it does support is Wacquant's key ar...more
This is a book iam reading. It is a "comparityive sociology of advanced marginality." Loic looks at the hyper ghettoization of the the black urban core in the united states. Loic comapres this to the suburban peripheries of France. Loic's point is to demonstrate the how marginality is differs in both places. Loic wants to maintain the historic and cultural specifities of these two different places, while at the same time, showing how there are external, structural economic factors that...more
A comparison of the "ghettos" of Paris and South Side Chicago. There's some great stuff denouncing the supposed ghettoization of France, and some wonderful critiques of the idea of the underclass. The last part sets out his ideas on advanced marginality, which are helpful in understanding the interactions of race and class in both countries.
In general, Loic Wacquant is a genius, but this wasn't really his best. The first three chapters were very redundant and not particularly insightful. The bits about France were interesting, though - i'd recommend skipping right to those chapters.
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