Slim's Table: Race, Respectability, and Masculinity by Mitchell Duneier
At the Valois See Your Food cafeteria on Chicago's South Side, black and white men gather over cups of coffee and steam-table food. Mitchell Duneier, a sociologist, spent four years at the Valois writing this moving profile of the black men who congregate at Slim's Table. Praised as a marvelous study of those who should not be forgotten by the Wall Street Journal,Slim's Table helps demolish the narrow sociological picture of black men and simple media-reinforced stereotypes. In between is a respectable citizenry, too often ignored and little understood.
Slim's Table is an astonishment. Duneier manages to fling open windows of perception into what it means to be working-class black, how a caring community can proceed from the most ordinary transactions, all the while smashing media-induced stereotypes of the races and race relations.-Citation for Chicago Sun Times Chicago Book of the Year Award
An instant classic of ethnography that will provoke debate and provide insight for years to come.-Michael Eric Dyson, Chicago Tribune
Mr. Duneier sees the subjects of his study as people and he sees the scale of their lives as fully human, rather than as diminished versions of grander lives lived elsewhere by people of another color. . . . A welcome antidote to trends in both journalism and sociology.-Roger Wilkins, New York Times Book Review
Slim's Table is an astonishment. Duneier manages to fling open windows of perception into what it means to be working-class black, how a caring community can proceed from the most ordinary transactions, all the while smashing media-induced stereotypes of the races and race relations.-Citation for Chicago Sun Times Chicago Book of the Year Award
An instant classic of ethnography that will provoke debate and provide insight for years to come.-Michael Eric Dyson, Chicago Tribune
Mr. Duneier sees the subjects of his study as people and he sees the scale of their lives as fully human, rather than as diminished versions of grander lives lived elsewhere by people of another color. . . . A welcome antidote to trends in both journalism and sociology.-Roger Wilkins, New York Times Book Review