Buch, Englisch, 204 Seiten, Hardback
Reihe: Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation Series
Race and Place in a New Orleans Neighborhood
Buch, Englisch, 204 Seiten, Hardback
Reihe: Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation Series
ISBN: 978-0-8203-3594-0
Verlag: The University of Georgia Press
Michael Crutcher argues that Tremé's story is essentially spatial—a story of how neighborhood boundaries are drawn and take on meaning and of how places within neighborhoods are made and unmade by people and politics. Tremé has long been sealed off from more prominent parts of the city, originally by the fortified walls that gave Rampart Street its name, and so has become a refuge for less powerful New Orleanians. This notion of Tremé as a safe haven—the flipside of its reputation as a “neglected” place—has been essential to its role as a cultural incubator, Crutcher argues, from the antebellum slave dances in Congo Square to jazz pickup sessions at Joe's Cozy Corner.
Tremé takes up a wide range of issues in urban life, including highway construction, gentrification, and the role of public architecture in sustaining collective memory. Equally sensitive both to black-white relations and to differences within the African American community, it is a vivid evocation of one of America's most distinctive places.