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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Walking the Razor's Edge and Making it Work,
By Robert Rex Walters (Santa Cruz, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Edgewalkers: Defusing Cultural Boundaries on the New Global Frontier (Paperback)
Dr. Krebs has done the worlds of psychology, sociology, cultural anthropology, and even business a tremendous favor with her highly original concept of Edgewalkers; those people originating from a distinct ethnic culture yet successfully (repeat: successfully) living and working within a different dominant culture. This book is a must-read for students, teachers, and lay persons interested in cultural diversity issues at any level.As an organizational psychologist interested in the ways in which people productively live and play together, I am continually amazed at the lack of understanding and tolerance within our contemporary workplace. In a greater sense, arenąt all of us members not only of the dominant culture, but also existing within one or more subcultures, sometimes voluntary, sometimes not? Dr. Krebs shines a laser beam on our contemporary cultural soup, teases out the active ingredients, and makes her case compelling for recognizing those contemporary humans that successfully walk the edge. Rex Walters, Ph.D.
4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Much-needed book...but a bit limited,
This review is from: Edgewalkers: Defusing Cultural Boundaries on the New Global Frontier (Paperback)
When I scanned thorough the summary of this book, I knew I had to read it. It seemed to me to be a book written about me...until I actually read it. Krebs repeatedly brings up examples of people who are well...non-white. I am white and a product of several cultures, yet most of her examples centered on Asians, Africans, Hispanics. Which reminds me of many people and institutions' definition of diversity: "bring colored people in for window dressing". I have a friend who is born in Thailand but has absolutely no connection to the culture as he was brought up in an upper-class Western European household. In college, he was pestered with constant invitations to the Asian students' club who urged him "to explore his heritage." I bring this example to illustrate the disappointment I felt after I had finished Krebs' book. She rushes through testimonials and experiences (which seem somehow incomplete and clinical) into point-by-point "suggestions" for reconciling a multicultural person's identities and patterns of thought/behavior. Still, I could not wrangle a meaningful conclusion out of this book...it stirred my emotions but did not deliver.
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Edgewalkers: Defusing Cultural Boundaries on the New Global Frontier by Nina Krebs (Paperback - September 1, 1999)
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