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Whose Tangle is it Anyway? The African‐American Family, Poverty and United States Kinship
Author(s) -
Marcus Anthony
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the australian journal of anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.245
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 1757-6547
pISSN - 1035-8811
DOI - 10.1111/j.1835-9310.2005.tb00109.x
Subject(s) - kinship , immigration , dysfunctional family , poverty , sociology , latin americans , race (biology) , narrative , gender studies , genealogy , political science , history , law , anthropology , psychology , linguistics , philosophy , psychotherapist
The comparison between United States immigrant and African‐American families presented by Daniel Patrick Moynihan in his 1965 report to President Lyndon Johnson remains the most popular folk model for explaining success, failure and mutual aid in poverty. Despite being savaged by social science in its first two decades and largely ignored in the last two, the Moynihan model is an enduring part of popular discourses on race, intensified by contemporary immigrant success narratives. Based on over three years of participant observation research among homeless African‐American and Latino men and their families and Latin‐American immigrants engaging in small business creation in New York City, I argue that Moynihan's empirically valid claim that certain immigrant family forms are more suited to mutual aid in crisis is misused to present the African‐American family as dysfunctional when its kinship norms are actually typically American.

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