It is amazing insight to the lives of several homeless drug users in California. This searing anthropology of everyday violence in the underbelly of the American metropolis will challenge social scientists and public health experts, stun lay readers, and shame public officials oblivious to the social dereliction their failed policies are spawning. Chapter two analyzes gender relations and the difference between sex, work, and love. Example 1: Sal is violent as a form of redemption It is mindful, targeted, effective, and ethical within its own logic. As a resident of San Francisco, I encounter homeless individuals on a daily basis. For two decades, this policy has failed to deter border crossers while successfully turning the rugged terrain of southern Arizona into a killing field. Subsequently he conducted a several year long intensive field research.
I didn't get all the way through this before it was due back at the library, but I did find it a very interesting peek into this often invisible or vilified population of hard-core drug users, how they structure their day, how they feel about themselves, how they feed their habit, the culture and societal rules they develop within the world of other drug users and what drives them to do what they do. The authors show how the requirements for free treatment programs limited to those who are terminally ill and difficulty of getting into a paid program thwarted many of their efforts. There was an increase in the number of homeless people in the 1980s due to housing and social service cuts increasing. The book, in the style of photo-ethnography, portrayed with unflinching rawness the everyday lives and histories of the San Francisco Edgewater Boulevard heroin-addicted homeless. He stood up, but his leg muscles spasmed and he fell down the highway embankment. A must-read, Righteous Dopefiend will rock the world of the sheltered middle class and shed new light on the pervasive structural inequalities plaguing contemporary society.
And last but not least they are very successful in showing the reader a suggestive view of the surveyed environment. As a resident of San Francisco, I encounter homeless individuals on a daily basis. Their field notes offer grim glimpses into the lives of a population that are largely ignored. All of the Edgewater homeless except Hank had children, and most had been married and divorced. After a just and humble Job has everything he ever valued in life stripped away from him, he is left begging for an answer to this question. Definition: Intimate Apartheid is a term the authors use to explore how embodied emotions, attitudes, and ways of acting reinforce distinctions, and in turn become misrecognized as racial attributes.
His careful re-telling of the changing policy related to homelessness and health care among the uninsured can serve as powerful motivation to policy makers to consider how legal change has far reaching affects on lives of disenfranchised individuals. This is one of the most insightful, well-written, and creative ethnographies I have read to date. The Land of Open Graves reveals the suffering and deaths that occur daily in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona as thousands of undocumented migrants attempt to cross the border from Mexico into the United States. A hell of a story. Likewise, there are no easy solutions. Book Description: This powerful study immerses the reader in the world of homelessness and drug addiction in the contemporary United States. Both wide-ranging and rich in detail, it speaks not simply to the abortion issue but also to the critical role of women's political activism.
You're pulled into the lives of homeless drug addicts in a way that manages to avoid sensationalism, and you end up encountering yourself and your own tendency to ignore others and their pain particularly when they're on street corners, under bridges, or panhandling. Please click button to get righteous dopefiend book now. The only reason I didn't give the book 5 stars is because of the uneven mix of styles. Righteous Dopefiend interweaves stunning black-and-white photographs with vivid dialogue, detailed field notes, and critical theoretical analysis. Most of their childhood homes were violent, and many had alcoholic parents. The book gives us better insight to the homeless culture and it does not hold back in showing the hardships of addiction. Her inviting writing style and fascinating examples make important new ideas from complexity theory and epigenetics accessible to undergraduates from all disciplines, regardless of academic background.
They can't do anything with knowledge except create unproductive self blame. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in social justice issues. The book, in the style of photo-ethnography, portrayed with unflinching rawness the everyday lives and histories of the San Francisco Edgewater Boulevard heroin-addicted homeless. The insights into the lives, hopes, and dreams of these young men, who serve as an example for many Muslim and otherwise marginalized immigrant youth groups in Western countries, provides the context necessary to understand their actions while never obscuring the many contradictory facets of their lives. Heroin Century makes available a wealth of information about the history, chemistry, pharmacology and medical aspects of heroin in a form accessible to anyone who wishes to participate in the contemporary debate bout society's attitude to drugs. I understand the authors didn't want to write a simple seedy exposé but rather to effect social change.
These freeways connect some of the highest-paying jobs in the United States to. The book details the gruesome material toll of addiction, infection and homelessness and the risks of ongoing personal and institutional violence. Paul Farmer is one of the most extraordinary people I've ever known. She resents people who think low of her because of her sex, as shown in her fight with Frank B S, 66. For over a decade Philippe Bourgois and Jeff Schonberg followed a social network of two dozen heroin injectors and crack smokers on the streets of San Francisco, accompanying them as they scrambled to generate income through burglary, panhandling, recycling, and day labor. These people walk by you every day and should not remain invisible.
The book is full of fascinating anecdotes, humanizing insights, heartbreaking photos, and thoughtful commentary. Social and living conditions make it hard for people in poverty to get out and largely affect children. The majority of the whites had no contact with their natal families; many no longer knew where their parents and siblings lived. It was interesting to read about addiction and homelessness through the lens of anthropology. They also detailed the repeated destruction of the addicts' shelters by government workers, which left these people who have so little with nothing--not a change of clothes, not a blanket, nothing. Righteous Dopefiendinterweaves stunning black-and-white photographs with vivid dialogue, detailed field notes, and critical theoretical analysis.