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Taxi!, April 2007
Hardcover
A Social History of the New York City Cabdriver
Johns Hopkins University Press
April 2007
On Sale: March 22, 2007
240 pages ISBN: 080188554X EAN: 9780801885549 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction History
Naturally identified with the Big Apple, New York City
cabdrivers hold a special place in the American folk culture
writ large. Cabbies proverbially counsel, console, and
confound, all the while flitting through the snarling
traffic and bustling masses of the nation's largest city.
Variously seen as the key to street-level opinion, a source
of reliable information, or mysterious savants who don't
speak much English, the hacks who move New Yorkers have been
integral to the city's growth and culture since the
mid-nineteenth century when they first began shuttling
residents, workers, and visitors in horse-drawn carriages.
Their importance grew with the introduction of
gasoline-powered cars early last century and continues to
the present day, when more than 12,000 licensed yellow cabs
operate in Manhattan alone. Taxi! is the first book-length history of New York City
cabdrivers and the community they compose. From labor unrest
and racial strife to ruthless competition and political
machinations, this deftly woven narrative captures the
people -- lower-class immigrants for the most part -- and
their hardscrabble struggle to capture a piece of the
American dream. Hodges tells the tale through contemporary
news accounts, Hollywood films, social science research, and
the words of the cabbies themselves. Whether or not you've ever hailed a cab on Broadway, Taxi!
provides a fascinating new perspective on New York's most
colorful emissaries.
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