Book

In search of respect: selling crack in El Barrio

Cambridge University PressCambridge • Published In 1996 • Pages: xii, 392

By: Bourgois, Philippe I..

Abstract
This work is a study of the experience of poverty, ethnic segregation, and economic marginalization in East Harlem, New York City. Bourgois describes the vast underground economy, ranging from curbside car repairing and baby sitting to unlicensed off-track betting and drug dealing, which provide a source of income for many of East Harlem's inner city inhabitants. Drug dealing, which is a symbol and symptom of the deeper dynamics of social marginalization and alienation, is given particular emphasis in this book. In an attempt to study this aspect of the inner city culture more throughly, the author, accompanied by his wife and child, moved to East Harlem, where he spent hundreds of nights on the streets and in crackhouses in the area observing dealers and addicts in operation. Several of these dealers Bourgois befriended and these served as his primary informants in his study of the drug culture. The data obtained from these informants, used in conjunction with his own field observations, serve as the basis of this study.
Subjects
Life history materials
Recreational and non-therapeutic drugs
Labor supply and employment
Illegal entertainment
Ingroup antagonisms
Household
Family relationships
Crime
Alcoholism and drug addiction
Delinquency
Public assistance
culture
Puerto Ricans (Mainland)
HRAF PubDate
2002
Region
North America
Sub Region
Regional, Ethnic and Diaspora Cultures
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 2000
Field Date
March 1985-September 1990
Coverage Date
late 1980s - 1994
Coverage Place
East Harlem, New York, N.Y., United States
Notes
Philippe Bourgois
Includes bibliographical references (p. 365-378) and index
LCCN
95005929
LCSH
Puerto Ricans--United States