The cosmopolitan canopy
By: ANDERSON, Elijah.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Thousand Oaks : SAGE, September 2004The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science 595, p. 14-31Abstract: The public spaces of the city are more racially, ethnically, and social diverse than ever. Social distance and tensin as expressed by wariness of strangers appear to be order of the day. But the "cosmopolitan canopy" offers a respite and an opportunity for diverse peoples to come together to do their business and also to engage in "folk ethnography" that serves as a cognitive and cultural base on wich people construct behavior in publicNo physical items for this record
The public spaces of the city are more racially, ethnically, and social diverse than ever. Social distance and tensin as expressed by wariness of strangers appear to be order of the day. But the "cosmopolitan canopy" offers a respite and an opportunity for diverse peoples to come together to do their business and also to engage in "folk ethnography" that serves as a cognitive and cultural base on wich people construct behavior in public
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