Misplacing Ogden Utah: Race Class Immigration and the Construction of Urban Reputations
Couldn't load pickup availability
About this book
How do we draw the lines between "good" and "bad" neighborhoods? How do we know ghettos? This book questions the widely held assumption that divisions between urban areas are reflections of varying amounts of crime deprivation and other social cultural and economic problems. Using Ogden Utah as a case study Pepper Glass argues that urban reputations are moral frontiers that uphold and create divides between who is a good and respectableor a bad and vilifiedmember of a community. Ogden a working-class city with a history of racial and immigrant diversity has long held a reputation among Utahns as a sin city in the middle of an entrenched religious culture. Glass blends ethnographic research with historical accounts census reports and other secondary sources to provide insight into Ogdens reputation past and present. Capturing residents perceptions of an entire city as opposed to only some of its neighborhoods and exploring the regional contexts shaping these views is rare among urban researchers. Glasss unique approach suggests we can better confront urban problems by rethinking assumptions about place and promoting interventions that break down boundaries.
