Mohamed’s corner: A New Orleans corner storeowner and his customers

Business people
By Nicolas Larchet, John Angell
English

Relationships between foreign business owners and black residents in American cities have rarely been studied except to note that they tend to function as “middleman minorities” in conflicts between the white and black communities. This study, based on observations of the daily life of a Mauritanian business owner in the Central City neighborhood of New Orleans, concludes that in this case, the owner performed a small “social miracle” by gaining his customers’ trust in spite of the challenge of social and cultural distance.

Keywords

  • African Americans
  • ethnography
  • business owners
  • class, race, and gender relations
  • neighborhood changes
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