Slim’s Table
Race, Respectability, and Masculinity
Slim’s Table
Race, Respectability, and Masculinity
"Slim’s Table is an astonishment. Duneier manages to fling open windows of perception into what it means to be working-class black, how a caring community can proceed from the most ordinary transactions, all the while smashing media-induced stereotypes of the races and race relations."—Citation for Chicago Sun Times Chicago Book of the Year Award
"An instant classic of ethnography that will provoke debate and provide insight for years to come."—Michael Eric Dyson, Chicago Tribune
"Mr. Duneier sees the subjects of his study as people and he sees the scale of their lives as fully human, rather than as diminished versions of grander lives lived elsewhere by people of another color. . . . A welcome antidote to trends in both journalism and sociology."—Roger Wilkins, New York Times Book Review
200 pages | 11 halftones | 5-1/2 x 8-1/2 | © 1992
Sociology: Race, Ethnic, and Minority Relations, Social Psychology--Small Groups
Table of Contents
1. Slim and Bart
2. Black Men: Transcending Roles and Images
Pt. Two: The Moral Community
3. Valois as a "Black Metropolis"
4. The Standard of Respectability
Pt. Three: Membership in Society
5. Openness
6. The Need for Contact with Society
7. A Higher Self
Pt. Four: You’re White, He’s Black, I’m a Sociologist: Who’s Innocent?
8. The Underclass and the Middle Class
9. The Stereotype of Blacks in Sociology and Journalism
10. Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Awards
American Sociological Association: ASA-Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award (1999-2005)
Won
The Chicago Sun-Times: Chicago Sun-Times Book of the Year Award
Won
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