Varieties of Urban Experience by Michael Ian Borer, Paperback, 9780761833871 | Buy online at The Nile
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Varieties of Urban Experience

The American City and the Practice of Culture

Author: Michael Ian Borer, Rhys H. Williams, Lisa Carolyn Henry Benham, Thomas Nesbit, Sarah L. Schrank, Sharon Sekhon, Kevin Keogan, Jerome Krase, Daniel J. Monti and Lyn H. Lofland  

Cities play an important role in American culture as sites of commerce, trade, entertainment, and the arts. We can learn a lot about what Americans believe and how they act upon those beliefs by looking at the ways our cultural dramas are continually played out on the city's stage. The essays in this volume decipher some of these experiences.

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Summary

Cities play an important role in American culture as sites of commerce, trade, entertainment, and the arts. We can learn a lot about what Americans believe and how they act upon those beliefs by looking at the ways our cultural dramas are continually played out on the city's stage. The essays in this volume decipher some of these experiences.

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Description

Cities play an important role in contemporary American culture as sites of commerce, trade, entertainment, and the arts. We can learn a lot about what Americans believe and how they act upon those beliefs by looking at the ways our cultural dramas are continually played out on the city's stage. The complexity and sheer variety of urban experiences can be overwhelming. In clear prose, the essays in this volume decipher some of these experiences and offer fresh analytical insights. Without relying on one theoretical, disciplinary, or ideological framework, the contributors collectively explore the city as an identity marker, an artist's muse, a cultural hybrid, and a place many call home. Issues related to gender, race, ethnicity, religion, and power are present in American cities and are therefore present within this collection. Most importantly, these essays acknowledge the hard work required to keep something as large and complex as a city running. The authors show how people practice culture and the ways that culture is expressed through myths, rituals, images, and places.

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About the Author

Michael Ian Borer is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Furman University. He received his Ph.D. in Sociology and M.A. in Religious Studies from Boston University. He has contributed essays to City & Community, Journal of Popular Culture, Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture, and Space & Culture. He is active in the academic community and a frequent presenter at scholarly conventions focused on sociology, urban studies, and cultural studies.

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More on this Book

Cities play an important role in contemporary American culture as sites of commerce, trade, entertainment, and the arts. We can learn a lot about what Americans believe and how they act upon those beliefs by looking at the ways our cultural dramas are continually played out on the city's stage. The complexity and sheer variety of urban experiences can be overwhelming. In clear prose, the essays in this volume decipher some of these experiences and offer fresh analytical insights. Without relying on one theoretical, disciplinary, or ideological framework, the contributors collectively explore the city as an identity marker, an artist's muse, a cultural hybrid, and a place many call home. Issues related to gender, race, ethnicity, religion, and power are present in American cities and are therefore present within this collection. Most importantly, these essays acknowledge the hard work required to keep something as large and complex as a city running. The authors show how people practice culture and the ways that culture is expressed through myths, rituals, images, and places.

Read more

Product Details

Publisher
University Press of America
Published
6th April 2006
Pages
212
ISBN
9780761833871

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