| Selected Product: | Code of the Street: Decency, Violence, and the Moral Life of the Inner City (Paperback) Paperback Edition: Reprint Author: Elijah Anderson Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company Release Date: 2000-09 ISBN-10: 0393320782 ISBN-13: 9780393320787 List Price: $17.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Unequal Childhoods: Class, Race, and Family Life ISBN-10: 0520239504 ISBN-13: 9780520239500 List Price:$21.95 When Work Disappears : The World of the New Urban Poor ISBN-10: 0679724176 ISBN-13: 9780679724179 List Price:$15.95 Honky ISBN-10: 0375727752 ISBN-13: 9780375727757 List Price:$12.95 Streetwise: Race, Class, and Change in an Urban Community ISBN-10: 0226018164 ISBN-13: 9780226018164 List Price:$16.00 Where Stuff Comes From: How Toasters, Toilets, Cars, Computers and Many Other Things Come to Be As They Are ISBN-10: 0415950422 ISBN-13: 9780415950428 List Price:$29.95 | To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Code of the Street: Decency, Violence, and the Moral Life of the Inner City (Paperback) by Elijah Anderson (ISBN-10: 0393320782, ISBN-13: 9780393320787). At this time we have not yet written a review for Code of the Street: Decency, Violence, and the Moral Life of the Inner City (Paperback) by Elijah Anderson (ISBN-10: 0393320782, ISBN-13: 9780393320787). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com As sociologist Elijah Anderson shows in the detailed and devastating Code of the Street, the senseless crime in the inner city represents a complex, though ultimately self-defeating, set of social mores. These mores, called "codes," stress a hyperinflated sense of manhood through verbal boasts, drug selling, sexual prowess, and--ultimately--violence and death. "At the heart of the code is the issue of respect," Anderson writes, "loosely defined as being treated 'right' or being granted one's 'props' (or proper due) or the deference one deserves." Anderson reveals a world where unemployment is rampant, teenage pregnancy is common, and social and educational achievement is viewed as "acting white." Although Anderson states that racism is a major factor for this condition, he notes that this type of behavior is further exacerbated by modern economic and political forces, and that it has existed as far back as ancient Rome. An Interesting and Realistic Book | Customer Rating: | | I'm not normally a fan of nonfiction but I really couldn't put this book down! Every section was authentic and interesting. It is another world. | Good stuff | Customer Rating: | | I bought this book for an assignment and found that it was highly informative. I would suggest this book for anyone thinking about going into law enforcement or criminology. | A winner | Customer Rating: | | Excellent book; I highly recommend. Extremely informative and insightful. A scholarly study written in plain language. It reveals the complexities of the subculture of street life and its terrorist rule in the neighborhoods it infiltrates. A must read for someone working in any aspect of criminal justice. - Corrections librarian. | A New Lens to See Through | Customer Rating: | I am so impressed with this book I can't believe it. Every page provided a new insight. As a white person I gained a whole new perspective on...well, everything, it seems like. Mr. Anderson does such a great job of giving an "inside look" into the inner city world, you really come away understanding a whole lot more.
I appreciated that Anderson laid the facts out without playing the blame game. His writing is objective but also compassionate; you can really see *individuals,* not just "black people." I closed the book thinking, "Well, I can't change everything, but with this knowledge I can sure make changes in myself, and at least that's a start." It takes a great book to provide that kind of power and inspiration. Just for that alone, I think every white person should read this book.
So, Bravo, Mr. Anderson! Please continue to write on the subject! | A very insightful book on inner city culture | Customer Rating: | This book is a study of inner city life in some of the really bad areas of Philadelphia. Its basic thesis is that the inner city culture is split between the majority who are decent and the large minority who are "street." He explains the origins and meaning of all of this very well.
A great strength of this book is how it takes you inside the head of the people it studies. He talks, for example, of the cruel contradiction that inner city boys are caught in. On the one side, if they do not wear gang clothing, and project "attitude" and "badness," they will be viewed as weak on the street, and may be physically attacked by others. On the other hand, if they do conform to street dress code, then both teachers and potential employers see them as gangters and refuse to help them get ahead. It is a double bind, in which children are forced to live in two cultures with contradictory values. As a result, as Anderson discusses, many kids learn to "code-switch" or act street on the street and white on the job. It is not easy to do, and it is not surprising that most can not do it well. |
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