£67.06

University Press of Mississippi Carnival in Alabama: Marked Bodies and Invented Traditions in Mobile

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£67 today · all-time low £67 (Oct 2025) · usually the usual

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Price History & Forecast

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Last 637 days • 637 data points (No recent data available)

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£87.00 £64.70 £69.57 £74.43 £79.30 £84.16 £89.03 10 June 2024 16 November 2024 24 April 2025 30 September 2025 08 March 2026

Price Distribution

Price distribution over 637 days • 10 price levels

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Current Price
77 days · current 72 days 51 days 36 days 35 days 28 days 25 days 261 days 19 days 33 days 0 65 131 196 261 £67 £69 £71 £72 £74 £75 £79 £82 £85 £87 Days at Price

Price Analysis

Most common price: £82 (261 days, 41.0%)

Price range: £67 - £87

Price levels: 10 different prices over 637 days

Description

Mobile is simultaneously a typical and unique city in the postwar United States. It was a quintessential boomtown during World War II. That prosperity was followed by a period of rapid urban decline and subsequent attempts at revitalizing (or gentrifying) its downtown area. As in many other US cities, urban renewal, integration, and other socioeconomic developments led to white flight, marginalized the African American population, and set the stage for the development of LGBTQ+ community building and subculture. Yet these usually segregated segments of society in Mobile converged once a year to create a common identity, that of a Carnival City. Carnival in Alabama looks not only at the people who participated in Mardi Gras organizations divided by race, gender, and/or sexual orientation, but also investigates the experience of “marked bodies” outside of these organizations, or people involved in Carnival through their labor or as audiences (or publics) of the spectacle. It also expands the definition of Mobile’s Carnival “tradition” beyond the official pageantry by including street maskers and laborers and neighborhood cookouts. Using archival sources and oral history interviews to investigate and analyze the roles assigned, inaccessible to, or claimed and appropriated by straight-identified African American men and women and people who defied gender and sexuality normativity in the festivities (regardless of their racial identity), this book illuminates power dynamics through culture and ritual. By looking at Carnival as an “invented tradition” and as a semiotic system associated with discourses of power, it joins a transnational conversation about the phenomenon.

Product Specifications

Format
Hardcover
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
27 January 2023
Listed Since
27 April 2022

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