Reviews
[An] insightful, engaging and sprawling book on the 'work' (and sometimes the 'play') of creating privacy in everyday life. . . . This book joins the small pantheon of original and enduring social studies of the topic. It will be necessary reading for specialists desiring to leave no contour unexamined. With a novelist's eye for the details of the taken-for-granted world and for imagining roads not taken, Nippert-Eng offers a cornucopia of stories about communication offered, withheld and blocked. Yet she goes beyond mere storytelling to provide broader conceptual maps. The book's many poignant, humorous and resonant stories will appeal to the general reader., Islands of Privacy is a brisk, invigorating read, and it provides a field guide for a subject that concerns us all., Looking for life in all the right places, Nippert-Eng takes us to the beach, the purse, and the email account. Through systematic and empathetic investigation, she shows how privacy and exposure to others are strategic accomplishments that vary over moments of the day, social context, and items at hand. The result is a unique substantive and methodological contribution from one of sociology's most inventive field workers., [An] insightful, engaging and sprawling book on the 'work' (and sometimes the 'play') of creating privacy in everyday life. . . . This book joins the small pantheon of original and enduring social studies of the topic. It will be necessary reading for specialists desiring to leave no contour unexamined. With a novelist's eye for the details of the taken-for-granted world and for imagining roads not taken, Nippert-Eng offers a cornucopia of stories about communication offered, withheld and blocked. Yet she goes beyond mere storytelling to provide broader conceptual maps. The book's many poignant, humorous and resonant stories will appeal to the general reader., Islands of Privacy is a most welcome contribution to the study of social interaction and interpersonal relations. As in her earlier book Home and Work , Christena Nippert-Eng combines a sophisticated theoretical mind and a remarkably astute empirical eye, demonstrating in numerous dazzling observations that, far from being trivial, everyday life provides a key to some of the most fundamental questions sociologists have been asking about the human condition. Islands of Privacy exhibits the kind of scholarship that, following in the intellectual footsteps of Erving Goffman, highlights the mundane, which is usually taken for granted and thereby ignored by most sociologists., Islands of Privacy is a major work of original research, depicting the processes, exchanges, and concerns involved in the ongoing social negotiation of this thing we call 'privacy.' The strength of Nippert-Eng's closely detailed approach is that it allows us to see that privacy is a complicated value subject to constant change, pressure, defense, and negation. The book is also elegantly written--in admirable Studs Terkel fashion, Nippert-Eng is able to get people to tell some great stories about the things that interest us all., This is a timely book, and its focus on the everyday actions of individuals to achieve and avoid privacy violations sets this book apart from others . . . The author should be complimented for undertaking the difficult task of investigating the everyday meanings of privacy., Islands of Privacy is a major work of original research, depicting the processes, exchanges, and concerns involved in the ongoing social negotiation of this thing we call 'privacy.' The strength of Nippert-Eng's closely detailed approach is that it allows us to see that privacy is a complicated value subject to constant change, pressure, defense, and negation. The book is also elegantly written-in admirable Studs Terkel fashion, Nippert-Eng is able to get people to tell some great stories about the things that interest us all.