
Surrounding all major cities in the United States are numerous smaller communities collectively known as suburbia. The most popular place of residence in America, the suburbs are peaceful and tranquil environments, where civility prevails and disturbances of the peace are uncommon. Drawing on research, observation, and hundreds of in-depth interviews conducted during a twelve-month study of an affluent New York City suburb, M.P. Baumgartner reveals that the apparent serenity of the suburb is caused by the avoidance of open conflict. She contends that although nonviolence, nonconfrontation, and tolerance produce a superficial social harmony, these behaviors arise from disintegrative tendencies in modern culture--transience, fragmentation, weak family and communal ties, isolation, and indifference--conditions customarily viewed as sources of disorder, antagonism, and violence. A kind of moral minimalism pervades the suburbs, a disorganized social order that, with the suburbs' rapid growth in America, promises to be the moral order of the future. A valuable contribution to the literature on social control, this study of conflict management should attract general readers and scholars alike.
This study investigates the paradox of suburban tranquility, questioning whether the apparent peace of these communities is a sign of social health or a symptom of cultural disintegration. M.P. Baumgartner, a sociologist, utilizes a twelve-month ethnographic study of an affluent New York City suburb to analyze the mechanisms of social control. She argues that the prevailing culture of non-confrontation and moral minimalism is not a product of strong communal bonds, but rather a result of social fragmentation, transience, and individual isolation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars frequently cite this work as a significant contribution to the study of social control and suburban sociology. Readers often note that the prose is accessible to a general audience while maintaining the analytical rigor expected in academic social science literature.
Page Count:
190
Publication Date:
1989-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190281537
ISBN-13:
9780190281533
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