Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Class Work

“Promise and potential:” Overlooked Vocational School Students in China

Class Work: Vocational Schools and China's Urban Youth by T.E. Woronov

June 19, 2022 by GentleRain 2 Comments

Stanford University Press was having an 80% off summer sale, which was an amazing deal, so I got a bunch of books that I otherwise would never have thought to purchase since academic press prices are usually prohibitively high. Class Work is the first of the batch that I’ve read, and it was a good start. This is a slim volume that packs a lot of information about the Chinese school system and the impact of testing and government efforts to make or re-mold class structures. […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: Anthropology, China, ethnography, schooling, T.E. Woronov, working class

GentleRain's CBR14 Review No:55 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: Anthropology, China, ethnography, schooling, T.E. Woronov, working class ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

Incisive and Interesting Essays on Orthodox Jewish Childhood

Artifacts of Orthodox Jewish Childhood by Dainy Bernstein (editor)

June 17, 2022 by GentleRain Leave a Comment

Artifacts of Orthodox Childhoods is a book of personal and critical essays that cover a historically under-researched topic. The book is inclusive of a wide range of viewpoints and backgrounds, and it benefits from the thought that went into the editing of the essays and the impulse to widen instead of narrow the people who contributed. I appreciated that this book didn’t retread the same familiar ground we see in the media of the triumphant escape from the backwards evil of Ultra-Orthodoxy. Instead, the collection gave […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: critical essays, Dainy Bernstein (editor), ethnography, Judaism, Othodox Judaism, personal essays, sociology

GentleRain's CBR14 Review No:54 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: critical essays, Dainy Bernstein (editor), ethnography, Judaism, Othodox Judaism, personal essays, sociology ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Real urban cowboys

The Compton Cowboys by Walter Thompson-Hernandez

January 17, 2021 by bonnie 1 Comment

I love Hidden Figures-style studies in cultures that are under-served, because they deserve more time and attention. I had first heard of the Compton Cowboys group early last year, and immediately went into record-scratch. Wait, what? An urban landscape like Compton has Black cowboys? I immediately desired the book and purchased it last summer. But I just got around to reading it now, because I’ve been hoarding books like no tomorrow. It’s more accurate to call this book an ethnography than a history, because it […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: bonnie, ethnography, Walter Thompson-Hernandez

bonnie's CBR13 Review No:6 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: bonnie, ethnography, Walter Thompson-Hernandez ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

Culture Shock

June 15, 2017 by Ellesfena Leave a Comment

First Fieldwork was an assigned reading when I took Intro to Anthropology in college. That was a good 15 years ago, and since then I’ve reread this book probably five times. It’s short, it’s interesting, and it’s hilarious. Barbara Gallatin Anderson recounts a fieldwork assignment in the tiny fishing village of Taarnby, Denmark. She and her husband are there to study the changes that urbanization is making to the culture of the small town. To this non-anthropologist, that sounds dull as dishwater, and I’m guessing […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction Tagged With: Anthropology, barbara gallatin anderson, Denmark, ethnography

Ellesfena's CBR9 Review No:27 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction · Tags: Anthropology, barbara gallatin anderson, Denmark, ethnography ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

The Cycle of Poverty

May 15, 2017 by Ale 3 Comments

  Thanks to bonnie’s review for turning me on to this book. This was a brutal, heartbreaking, depressing and necessary read. Desmond is a sociologist who spent several years living in Milwaukee’s depressed and impoverished areas, befriending and interviewing the residents of trailer parks, flop houses, and slums. He tells their stories in intertwining chapters that would read like fiction if you didn’t already know that these people are all incredibly real. Because often fact is stranger than fiction, or in this case, revealing, Desmond’s […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: ethnography, eviction, inner city studies, matthew desmond, poverty, sociology

Ale's CBR9 Review No:9 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: ethnography, eviction, inner city studies, matthew desmond, poverty, sociology ·
Rating:
· 3 Comments


Recent Comments

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  • Emmalita on “It came to something when you found yourself hoping that the footsteps you heard were ghosts.”I loved the ending! I don’t think it’s been out long enough to talk about why though.
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