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The World in a City

Traveling the Globe Through the Neighborhoods of the New New York

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“The whole world can be found in this city. . . .”
–from the Preface
Fifty years ago, New York City had only a handful of ethnic groups. Today, the whole world can be found within the city’s five boroughs–and celebrated New York Times reporter Joseph Berger sets out to discover it, bringing alive the sights, smells, tastes, and people of the globe while taking readers on an intimate tour of the world’s most cosmopolitan city.
For urban enthusiasts and armchair explorers alike, The World in a City is a look at today’s polyglot and polychrome, cosmopolitan and culturally rich New York and the lessons it holds for the rest of the United States as immigration changes the face of the nation. With three out of five of the city’s residents either foreign-born or second-generation Americans, New York has become more than ever a collection of villages–virtually self-reliant hamlets, each exquisitely textured by its particular ethnicities, history, and politics. For the price of a subway ride, you can visit Ghana, the Philippines, Ecuador, Uzbekistan, and Bangladesh.
As Berger shows us in this absorbing and enlightening tour, New York is an endlessly fascinating crossroads. Naturally, tears exist in this colorful social fabric: the controversy over Korean-language shop signs in tony Douglaston, Queens; the uneasy proximity of traditional cottages and new McMansions built by recently arrived Russian residents of Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn. Yet in spite of the tensions among neighbors, what Berger has found most miraculous about New York is how the city and its more than eight million denizens can adapt to–and even embrace–change like no other place on earth, from the former pushcart knish vendor on the Lower East Side who now caters to his customers via the Internet, to the recent émigrés from former Soviet republics to Brooklyn’s Brighton Beach and Midwood whose arrival saved New York’s furrier trade from certain extinction.
Like the place it chronicles, The World in a City is an engaging hybrid. Blending elements of sociology, pop culture, and travel writing, this is the rare book that enlightens readers while imbuing them with the hope that even in this increasingly fractious and polarized world, we can indeed co-exist in harmony.
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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from September 15, 2007
      New York, always a city of immigrants, has in the past half century attracted new residents of myriad ethnicities. Long-established Italian, Irish, Greek, and Jewish enclaves now sit alongside, share space with, or are being transformed into communities from Uzbekistan, Somalia, Guyana, and Bangladesh. "New York Times" reporter Berger ("Displaced Persons: Growing Up American After the Holocaust") explores 22 neighborhoods citywide to learn the folkways of people living on borders between twoor morecultures. Berger details a controversy among Orthodox Jews in Midwood, Brooklyn, as to whether the municipal drinking water is kosher. He travels to work with a Palestinian woman who commutes four hours daily from the Bronxs Bedford Park neighborhood for a $7-an-hour part-time job. He considers ways immigrants nurture connections to their homelands, from phone cards and videoconferencing to the expatriate Ghanaian practice of buying a home in Ghana, absent definite plans to move back. In his brisk but detailed, respectful, and captivating tour, Berger considers economics, immigration policy, adaptation, identity, domestic issues, and the awkward intersection of American and homeland cultural expectations. Highly recommended for New York libraries and for all travel and social sciences collections.Janet Ingraham Dwyer, Worthington Libs., OH

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2007
      New York City hosts the headquarters of the United Nations, and the citys patchwork of neighborhoods analogously reflect a microcosmic Pangaea where nearly every nationality enjoys an enclave. There the newly arrived celebrate their ethnic origins, adding new harmonies within an ever-diversifying American nation. Berger introduces his readers to this amazing metropolis, spotlighting some of the citys unique denizens: a Chinese cobbler plying his trade on Manhattans thoroughfares, an Italian barber serving an overwhelmingly Hispanic clientele, a Ghanaian cabbie, and an Indian cardiologist. Not all goes well in the struggle to succeed. Bukharan men tend to beat their wives. Ethnic Indians escaping Guyana endure humiliation at the hands of immigrants who arrived in America directly from the subcontinent. For travelers eager to explore these city neighborhoods for themselves, Berger catalogs a few shops, eateries, and other ethnically significant sites at the end of each chapter.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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