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Coffee Culture

Laurie Taylor explores the subcultural lives of Philadelphia baristas employed in speciality coffee shops and asks why Italian espresso bars are so often run by Chinese baristas.

Urban baristas in a US city and Chinese managed coffee bars in Italy.

Laurie Taylor talks to Geoffrey Moss, Professor of Instruction in the Department of Sociology, Temple University, about the subcultural lives of hipsters who are employed in Philadelphia. Such young people have taken low-wage service sector jobs, despite their middle-class origins and educational background, because they enjoy the city's hipster subculture. Working within cool, noncorporate coffee shops with like minded colleagues blurs lines between work and leisure. For those that are artistic, barista life has provided a flexible work schedule which allows time for creative pursuits. But this new research suggests that these subcultural lives are now greatly diminished by class, race and gentrification.

Also, Grazia Ting Deng, Lecturer at Brandeis University's Department of Anthropology, explores the paradox of β€œChinese espresso". The coffee bar is a cornerstone of Italian urban life, with city residents sipping espresso at more than 100,000 of these local businesses throughout the country. So why is espresso in Italy increasingly prepared by Chinese baristas in Chinese-managed coffee bars? Deng investigates the rapid spread of Chinese-owned coffee bars since the Great Recession of 2008 and draws on her extensive ethnographic research in Bologna. She finds that longtime residents have come, sometimes resentfully, to regard Chinese expresso as a new normal and immigrants have assumed traditional roles, even as they are regarded as racial others.

Producer: Jayne Egerton

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28 minutes

Last on

Sunday 06:05

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Guests and Further reading

- , Professor of Instruction in Sociology at Temple University, Philadelphia

Barista in the City: Subcultural Lives, Paid Employment, and the Urban Context by Geoffrey Moss, ²Ή²Τ»εΜύ Μύ(Έι΄Η³ά³Ω±τ±π»ε²΅±π)


- , Lecturer in Anthropology at Β Brandeis University, Β Massachusetts. Chinese Espresso: Contested Race and Convivial Space in Contemporary ItalyΒ (Princeton University Press)

Broadcasts

  • Tue 10 Sep 2024 15:30
  • Sunday 06:05

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