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      Chapter

      Street vending and everyday life in an authentic 21st century
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      Chapter

      Street vending and everyday life in an authentic 21st century

      DOI link for Street vending and everyday life in an authentic 21st century

      Street vending and everyday life in an authentic 21st century book

      Street vending and everyday life in an authentic 21st century

      DOI link for Street vending and everyday life in an authentic 21st century

      Street vending and everyday life in an authentic 21st century book

      ByRenia Ehrenfeucht
      BookRoutledge Handbook of Street Culture

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      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2020
      Imprint Routledge
      Pages 12
      eBook ISBN 9780429284816
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      ABSTRACT

      This chapter discusses the 20th century street vending context, the major forces influencing how street vending has been interpreted and responded to in early 21st century cities and then, using a food truck controversy in Chicago and the regulation of second-line vending in New Orleans, the effects of the trends. Street vending has been a touchpoint for urban life stretching back to early cities that served as centers of trade and commerce. On the street, people exchanged goods, shared specialized knowledge, skills or services and exchanged information. In industrial cities, life unfolded on the streets. Prior to and in areas without refrigeration, iterant food vendors brought fresh food to urban neighborhoods. The situation in Guangzhou highlights a fundamental tension: Accepting street life can still mean creating a highly controlled environment or attempting to move it to undesirable spaces. The situation of street vending speaks to the shifting role of street cultures of living that take place on the street.

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