
Tally's Corner: A Study of Negro Streetcorner Men
Author(s): Elliot Liebow (Author), Charles Lemert (Foreword), William Julius Wilson (Editor)
- Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
- Publication Date: 24 Sept. 2003
- Edition: New
- Language: English
- Print length: 224 pages
- ISBN-10: 0742528952
- ISBN-13: 9780742528956
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Whenever and wherever people come out of the dark to face the shadow of America’s befuddled relation to the Black man of the city, Tally’s Corner is somewhere on the penumbra of consciousness, serving as a lifeline against the currents of ill-informed racist blather about urban poverty. . . . The story of the Black man of the city is ultimately the story of the modern city itself, and in turn of the postmodern global economy. It is a story that is nowhere near its final chapter. — Charles Lemert, Andrus Professor of Sociology, Wesleyan University
From Reviews of the First Edition: Elliot Liebow is an honest and talented anthropologist who can see clearly, feel unashamedly, and write a straight lively sentence. His book, Tally’s Corner . . . emerges as a valuable and even surprising triumph. ―Sunday New York Times This is a sharp, hard-hitting observation of a segment of life and society in action. ―Washington Star Nothing short of brilliant―a work of importance ―Daniel Patrick Moynihannnn
The true mark of a classic book is whether it can withstand the test of time. [Liebow’s] arguments concerning the work experience and family life of black street-corner men in a Washington, D.C. ghetto still ring true today. . . . In the last three decades, low-skilled African-American males have encountered greater difficulty gaining access to jobs, even menial jobs. — William Julius Wilson, Lewis P. and Linda L. Geyser University Professor, Harvard University
From Reviews of the First Edition: Elliot Liebow is an honest and talented anthropologist who can see clearly, feel unashamedly, and write a straight lively sentence. His book, Tally’s Corner . . . emerges as a valuable and even surprising triumph. ―Sunday New York Times This is a sharp, hard-hitting observation of a segment of life and society in action. ―Washington Star Nothing short of brilliant―a work of importance ―Daniel Patrick Moynihan
It’s a remarkable book, an academic work – it grew out of Liebow’s doctoral thesis – that isn’t dry or boring. It’s an in-depth look at a group of men who routinely hung out on a Washington street corner in the early 1960s. These are poor men, flawed men, unemployed and underemployed men. But they are treated with respect. And although Liebow used pseudonyms, giving the men such names as Tally, Sea Cat, Richard and Leroy, they come across as flesh-and-blood individuals. When Tally’s Corner was published in 1967, the New York Times called it “a valuable and even surprising triumph.” The late senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) called it “nothing short of brilliant.” ―
The Washington Post
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