Urban Tribes
by Ethan Watters
Unknown
October 1, 2003
ISBN #1582342644
272 pages
Hardcover
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REVIEWS

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"Interesting premise"
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted September 5, 2003

This book fosters an interesting theory on why young Americans seem to be marrying at a much older age than previous generations; that is if they ever marry. Mr. Watters contends that relationships today are forged around a tribal mentality. Group dynamics form extended families that reflect much Read more...


"Do goups like Friends and Seinfeld actually exist in the real world?"
Reviewed by Norman Goldman
Courtesy Bookpleasures
Posted November 23, 2003

Reading Ethan Watters' URBAN TRIBES is like watching an investigative report analyzing the characters and groups depicted in sitcoms such as Friends or Seinfeld. When I watch these shows I often ask myself, do similar groups or relationships actually exist in the real world? Apparently, they are alive and Read more...




Summary

"Playful without being ironic and meaningful without being sappy, Urban Tribes will be a seminal book. In a decade, we will look back and realize that this book changed how we look at the period during which young adults live between families."-Po Bronson, New York Times bestselling author of What Should I Do With My Life? The numbers can't be ignored: the current generation of young Americans is delaying marriage longer than any other generation in history. But while the media trumpets this fact in a way that seems designed to scare us, until now no one has really taken the time to understand what people are doing instead. Driven by his personal desire to understand why his single life stretched far into his thirties, Ethan Watters explores the cultural and social forces that have steered his generation away from the altar-and discovers many reasons to be optimistic about the course his generation has chosen. Central to his thinking is the idea of Urban Tribes: the closely knit communities of friends that spring up during the ever-increasing period of time between college and married life. Tribes are revealed to be the key to understanding this generation, explaining not only why its members are putting off marriage, but also why singles often live outside of families so happily. In the end, Watters makes the case that the tribe years engender the self-respect critical to successful partnerships. A funny, deeply insightful, and compulsively readable book that dares to suggest that the generation in question just might be interested in more than buying the latest SUV and drinking lattes at the local coffeehouse, Urban Tribes is destined to become one of the most talked-about books of the year. "This is one of the best books I have read in a long time. Urban Tribes redefines the debate over the nature of community and social cohesion in society today. Ethan Watters provides powerful insight into the rise of new kinds of cities and support structures for the growing class of creative, single people inhabiting leading urban centers in the United States and around the world." - Richard Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class: And How It's Transforming Work, Leisure, Community and Everyday Life



 

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