Complex Ethnic Households in America
Rae Lesser Blumberg, Rae Lesser Blumberg (Editor), Anna Y. ChanBooks.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.
Overview
What commonalities link Navajos in their vast Arizona reservation and rural whites in upstate New York? More than you would suspect when both live in complex households that include people other than nuclear kin. This groundbreaking interdisciplinary book on complex households in six U.S. ethnic groups-Navajos, whites, Inupiat of Alaska, African Americans in urban coastal Virginia, Korean immigrants in New York City, and Latino immigrants in central Virginia-uniquely combines rich ethnographic descriptions with theory-linked overviews and Census 2000 data. It explores interactions of household structure, ethnicity, and gender, while illuminating factors affecting the formation and dissolution of complex households, which are becoming increasingly important as ethnic diversity increases throughout the United States.Synopsis
This lively interdisciplinary book on _complex households_ in six U.S. ethnic groups uniquely combines rich ethnographic description conveying the _sights and smells_ of fieldwork with theory-linked overviews and Census 2000 data. It explores interactions of household structure, ethnicity and gender, also illuminating factors affecting formation and dissolution of complex households, which are increasingly important as family and ethnic diversity - and immigration - grow. It's valuable for student and professional sociologists, anthropologists, demographers, research methodologists, policymakers and interested public.
Editorials
Contemporary Sociology
This is a gem of a book. It not only makes a significant contribution to scholarship, but is enjoyable to read.With its unusual combination of ethnography, demography, and theoretical insights, the book would be useful in a variety of courses—including ethnic studies, anthropology, demography, and especially, the sociology of the family. Further, it contains an important message for social scientists, policy makers, and others who take it for granted that census bureau classifications of household and family structure and relationships are hard, objective data, valid for the entire population.