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City Trenches Summary

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In City Trenches, Ira Katznelson argues that the working class in American cities developed two distinct spheres of political life: one professional and one personal. This distinction was a consequence of the emergence of a capitalism economy. Instead of professional political solidarity, the working class mobilized in their individual ethnic communities. Katznelson uses the Washington Heights and Inwood neighborhoods of northern Manhattan to explain the ethnic politics phenomena. In Washington Heights, the Jewish population enjoyed political control for a significant portion of the late nineteenth and up to the mid-twentieth century. Likewise, Irish Americans settled in Inwood where they managed to control neighborhood politics for much of …show more content…

In Europe, the merger of the state, nobility, and economic elite began in large cities. These cities functioned as hubs for political and financial power in any given kingdom or empire. As a consequence, political and economic affairs were no longer distinct entities, which served the elite well, but came at the expense of working class artisans. Katznelson provides readers with this background information to explain the opposite effect occurred in the United States. In the U.S., electoral politics caused a working class political unit to form. Workers realized that the interest of their employer conflict with employers and sought to have a direct role in the political …show more content…

The professional interests of the worker are regulated to the workplace. This regulation is a choice of the worker. Instead, the worker is the only influencer in their personal politics, without any connection to their professional life. Therefore, Katznelson appears to take the approach of the worker having agency in political life in the American city. Unlike the other authors we have discussed, who take a hard line on a conglomerated political elite controlling politics in cities, Katznelson believes that working class individuals have some control over how politics operate in their city. He does not that deny power is vested in an elite on a large citywide level. Katznelson’s assertion is that working class politics place emphasis on everyday neighborhood politics instead of worrying about the problems of City Hall. The political elite of the city and the working class neighborhood residents works in conjugation, largely based on ethnic lines. Katznelson does reference Dahl once in City Trenches. Dahl’s discussion of the formation of the power elite on economic lines is what Katznelson referenced, which then became political power. The city trench system was a new political system designed to combine political and financial

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