Jennifer Lee takes us on a masterful tour of poor and middle class African American shopping streets, their Jewish, Korean and black merchants and their black shoppers. The result is a thoughtful and nuanced portrait of everyday interracial commercial relations; it is also a compelling study of urban civility resting on fault lines of potential racial and economic conflict.
Mary Waters
Civility in the City redirects our attention from the headline news of racial conflict and tensions to the unexamined everyday life of routine and civil interactions that govern relations between Jewish, Korean and African American merchants and their black customers. Through extensive field work, Lee deftly explores the ways in which merchants, ever aware of the potential for racial conflict, manage relations with their customers in ways that reduce the potential for problems to develop. The nuanced picture of day to day life that Lee develops should be required reading for anyone seeking to understand the complexities of our diverse and unequal society.
Mary Waters, Harvard University
Paul Sniderman
Most books about race in America are about other books about race in America. Jennifer Lee shows the value of original, first-hand observation. She holds up a mirror to the way that blacks and minorities actually get along, not in the sensational incidents that make the headlines, but in the mass of their regular, everyday, ordinary dealings with one another. And what her work reveals is that these dealings, overwhelmingly, are marked by a taken-for-granted civility and respect on both sides. This is a book worth the most serious attention.
Paul Sniderman, Stanford University
Roger Waldinger
The multiethnic metropolis of 21st century America may be a contentious place, but as Jennifer Lee shows in this significant new book, today's melting pot isn't about to heat over at full boil. Looking at the city's sharpest edge where Korean merchants encounter African-American clients Lee illuminates both the conditions that generate tension, and the surprising range of strategies that immigrant entrepreneurs deploy to avert conflict and maintain business as usual. This is an important achievement, deserving the attention of anyone interested in the new, urban America unfolding before our eyes.
Roger Waldinger, UCLA
Herbert Gans
Jennifer Lee takes us on a masterful tour of poor and middle class African American shopping streets, their Jewish, Korean and black merchants and their black shoppers. The result is a thoughtful and nuanced portrait of everyday interracial commercial relations; it is also a compelling study of urban civility resting on fault lines of potential racial and economic conflict.
Herbert Gans, Columbia University
Lawrence D. Bobo
Civility in the City brings a major new perspective on the fabric of life in America's multiethnic urban centers. Jennifer Lee's well-crafted book moves beneath the simple images of conflict and racial division. Her interviews and ethnographic work reveal the true complexity and frequently harmonious interactions among blacks, and Jewish and Korean immigrant merchants. The book also sheds important new light on when and why these relations are likely to become divisive episodes of racial conflict. Civility in the City is as important for the theory it develops as it is for the social reality it so vividly puts before us. The book is a must read for anyone seriously interested in understanding multiethnic urban life in the U.S. today.
Lawrence D. Bobo, Harvard University