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by rovolo
805 days ago
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The generous interpretation of "suburban America" is that both the author and interviewee live in the suburbs: > I grew up in Temecula, a California suburb > his house in Laguna Niguel, in a trim suburban neighbourhood But the project started off in an urban area: > In the fall of 2004, Frank [would] drive through the darkened streets of Washington, D.C., with stacks of self-addressed postcards I think though that "suburban" is playing the same role as "middle-class". Despite the technical definition, I think both terms imply everyday, normal, boring, "real" Americans. I agree this usage is weird and I wish people would stop using "suburban" this way. |
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