About NYU Press Our Affiliates Jobs Sitemap
 
The End of the Hamptons
Scenes from the Class Struggle in America's Paradise
Corey Dolgon
 
277 pages
24 illustrations
May, 2005
ISBN: 9780814719589
 
Introduction
Table of Contents
 
$70.00 Cloth
also available in Paper, eBook
click here for exam copies
 
Bookmark and Share
 
Subjects: New York City, History, Sociology
 

Winner of the 2005 Book Prize from the Association for Humanist Sociology

In this absorbing account of New York’s famous vacation playground, Corey Dolgon goes beyond the celebrity tales and polo games to tell us the story of this complex and contentious land. From the displacement of Native Americans by the Puritans to the first wave of Manhattan elites who built the Summer Colony, to the current infusion of telecommuting Manhattanites who now want to live there year-round, the story of the Hamptons is a vicious cycle of supposed paradise lost.

Drawing on this fabled land's history, The End of the Hamptons provides a fascinating portrait of current controversies: the Native Americans fighting over land claims and threatening to build a casino, the environmental activists clashing with the McMansion builders, and the Latino day laborers and working-class natives trying to eke out a living in an ever-increasingly expensive town.


Copyright © 2012 NYU Press. All rights reserved. Legal and Privacy. Design by Point Five, NY. Developed by Seisan.
Resources for:
   Authors
   Educators
   Reviewers/Media

Sign up for our newsletters!
Connect with us!