Full Description
Vacant lots. Historic buildings overgrown with weeds. Walls and alleyways covered with graffiti. These are sights associated with countless inner-city neighborhoods in America, and yet many viewers have trouble getting beyond the surface of such images, whether they are denigrating them as signs of a dangerous ghetto or romanticizing them as traits of a beautiful ruined landscape. The Street: A Field Guide to Inequality provides readers with the critical tools they need to go beyond such superficial interpretations of urban decay.
Using MacArthur fellow Camilo José Vergara's intimate street photographs of Camden, New Jersey as reference points, the essays in this collection analyze these images within the context of troubled histories and misguided policies that have exacerbated racial and economic inequalities. Rather than blaming Camden's residents for the blighted urban landscape, the multidisciplinary array of scholars contributing to this guide reveal the oppressive structures and institutional failures that have led the city to this condition. Tackling topics such as race and law enforcement, gentrification, food deserts, urban aesthetics, credit markets, health care, childcare, and schooling, the contributors challenge conventional thinking about what we should observe when looking at neighborhoods.
Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Part I State Systems and Predatory Profit
No. 1 Racial Patterning of Travel in America
No. 2 Dignity in an Era of Financialization
No. 3 The Inequitable Erosion of Hospital Care
Part II Symbols and Sentiments
No. 4 Building Codes: Built Elements of the Housing Landscape
No. 5 Symbols of Social Suffering
No. 6 Dissonance
No. 7 Race, Gentrification, and the Making of Domestic Refugees
Part III Social Stories and Stigmatized Space
No. 8 Housing Segregation and the Forgotten Latino American Story
No. 9 Stolen Narratives and Racialized Structural Inequality
No. 10 Disinvestment v. The People's Persistence
No. 11 Racial Patterning of Fast Food
Part IV Safety and Security
No. 12 Persistence of Black/White Inequities in Infant Mortality
No. 13 Urban Childcare Dilemmas
No. 14 Disinvestment in Urban Schools
No. 15 Racism in Law Enforcement
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors