"John Hartigan Jr. is Assistant Professor in the Institute of Anthropology at the University of North Texas. His work on ""white trash"" and the ""white underclass"" has been published in a range of journals and edited volumes."
"""Hartigan is a good storyteller ... and a clear analyst of how local residents, black and white, make sense of race as it affects their lives and their sometimes desperate attempts to make do in this impoverished bit of the city... By asking us to see race and class in different ways, this book helps us to imagine a world where such categories might be meaningless or superseded, even as it immerses us in the intractable, dangerous and hurtful relationships these fields of inequality perpetuate around us.""--Marc Christensen, Metro Times Detroit ""A sobering examination of the tangled web of race, class, and struggles over space.""--Choice ""This inventive, impressive [book] ... contributes to the reorientation of studies of white identity ... [It will] reward historians who venture into this ambitious anthropological account.""--David Roediger, Journal of American Ethnic History ""This is an excellent book that ought to be widely read ... Substantively important, theoretically sophisticated, and full of unforgettable characters.""--Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Contemporary Sociology"