Urban Engagement Book Club: "Ain't No Makin' It: Aspirations and Attainment in a Low-Income Neighborhood"

Jul 3 2008 - 12:00pm
Jul 3 2008 - 1:15pm

The following is the product description of the book on the amazon.com website.

“I ain’t goin’ to college. Who wants to go to college? I’d just end up gettin’ a shitty job anyway.” So said Freddie Piniella, an eleven-year-old boy from Clarendon Heights low-income housing project, to Jay MacLeod, his counselor in a youth program. MacLeod was struck by the seeming self-defeatism of Freddie and his friends. How is it that in America, a nation of dreams and opportunities, a boy of eleven can feel trapped in a position of inherited poverty?The author immersed himself in the teenage underworld of Clarendon Heights. The Hallway Hangers, one of the neighborhood cliques, appear as cynical self-destructive hoodlums. The other group, the Brothers, take the American Dream to heart and aspire to middle-class respectability. The twist is that the Hallway Hangers are mostly white; the Brothers are almost all black. Comparing the two groups, MacLeod provides a provocative account of how poverty is perpetuated from one generation to the next.

For more information on the Urban Engagement Book Club, go to  www.centraldallasministries.org/uebc/index.htm.

Location
Highland Park United Methodist Church
3300 Mockingbird Lane
Dallas, TX
United States
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