DC Public Library System

The street, a photographic field guide to American inequality, edited by Naa Oyo A. Kwate ; photographs by Camilo José Vergara ; foreword by Darnell L. Moore

Label
The street, a photographic field guide to American inequality, edited by Naa Oyo A. Kwate ; photographs by Camilo José Vergara ; foreword by Darnell L. Moore
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
Illustrations
mapsillustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The street
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1182019339
Responsibility statement
edited by Naa Oyo A. Kwate ; photographs by Camilo José Vergara ; foreword by Darnell L. Moore
Sub title
a photographic field guide to American inequality
Summary
"What do vacant lots signify? How should we interpret architectural relics overgrown with weeds? What social processes do street art memorials embody? The Street drills down into the intimate street photography of Camilo J. Vergara to outline a visual dictionary for urban inequality. City streets reveal much about the inequality that carves up American life and opportunity, and urban corridors harbor evidence that society has sorted people, communities, and resources unequally. In this collection, a leading cast of scholars from a variety of disciplines creatively interpret Vergara's photos of Camden, New Jersey. Field guides give readers the tools to identify phenomena quickly and accurately; this guide visualizes the elements, policies, and social exchanges that characterize and contest inequality in the United States. Drawing on Camden as a case study, each essay decodes the visuals that require scrutiny to understand the unequal landscapes of American cities and makes clear that the stereotyped analyses of urban residents and neighborhoods are insufficient. Where Camden has been popularly construed as a failed urbanity-and that failure is attached to the residents who live there-the writers in this volume illuminate the public and private policies that are responsible, offering a corrective to predictable analyses of poor cities. Tackling topics such as race and law enforcement, gentrification, food environments, childcare and schooling, urban aesthetics, credit markets, and health care, the contributors look for markers of inequality and challenge conventional thinking about what we should see when we observe troubled landscapes. A timely book that will be of interest to fans, citizens, students, and scholars of urban life, The Street is an innovative guidebook to the most urgent challenges facing American cities today"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Foreword / Darnell L. Moore -- Introduction / Naa Oyo A. Kwate -- Part I: State systems and predatory profit -- Racial patterning of travel in America / Norman W. Garrick -- Dignity in an era of financialization / Anthony S. Alvarez -- The inequitable erosion of hospital care / Alecia J. Mcgregor -- Part II: Symbols and sentiments -- Building codes: Built elements of the housing landscape / Zaire Z. Dinzey-Flores -- Symbols of social suffering / Jacqueline Olvera -- Dissonance / Naa Oyo A. Kwate -- Race, gentrification, and the making of domestic refugees / Stacey Sutton -- Part III: Social stories and stigmatized spaces -- Housing segregation and the forgotten Latino American story / Jacob S. Rugh -- Stolen narratives and racialized structural inequalities / Jay A. Pearson -- Disinvestment v. the people’s persistence / Mindy Thompson Fullilove -- Racial patterning of fast food / Naa Oyo A. Kwate -- Part IV: Safety and security -- Persistence of Black/White inequalities in infant mortality / Kellee White -- Urban childcare dilemmas / Janice Johnson Dias -- Disinvestment in urban schools / Leconte J. Dill -- Racism in law enforcement / Craig B. Futterman, Chaclyn Hunt, and Jamie Kalven
Classification
Content
writerofforeword
Other version
Mapped to