https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241616657873 https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241616657873
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography
2018, Vol. 47(3) 306–335
© The Author(s) 2016
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DOI: 10.1177/0891241616657873
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Article
Buskers of New Orleans:
Transgressive Sociology
in the Urban Underbelly
Peter Marina
1
Abstract
This article is based on extensive ethnographic research involving living
and working on the urban fringes of the postindustrial, tourist-intensive
economy of New Orleans. As this late modern metropolis has experienced
great structural transformations, and as new urban dwellers have emerged
with their own unique cultural solutions to the structural problems posed
in late modernity, this work captures the culture of urban dwellers living
on the social periphery of New Orleans. The analysis reveals the less-seen
spaces of New Orleans, intimately depicting the social life of the new creative
urban buskers through sociological analysis and reflexive ethnographic
interpretation. Revealing the underbelly of New Orleans requires not only
traditional interviews and participant observation but also full immersion
into the subcultures of buskers through my performing on the streets with
buskers in the tourist economy as they carve out creative and transgressive
lives on the urban fringes.
Keywords
buskers of New Orleans, informal street economy, urban ethnography,
urban underbelly, sociology of transgression
1
Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin–La Crosse, La Crosse, WI, USA
Corresponding Author:
Peter Marina, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin–La Crosse, La Crosse, WI
54601, USA.
Emails: pjmarinauwl@gmail.com; petermarina.com
657873JCE XX X 10.1177/0891241616657873Journal of Contemporary EthnographyMarina
research-article 2016