Segregation and resistance in the landscapes of the Americas
Preface / Thaïsa Way -- Introduction / Eric Avila and Thaïsa Way – I. Landscapes of segregation : intentions and rationales. Developing spaces of exclusion / Paige Glotzer ; Quarantine, eradication, and prescription : how health segregated the American urban landscape / Sara Jensen Carr ; Open land...
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Weitere Verfasser: | , |
Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Washington, D.C.
Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection
2023
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Schriftenreihe: | Dumbarton Oaks Colloquium on the History of Landscape Architecture
44 |
Schlagworte: |
Geschichte
> Teilhabe
> Stadtplanung
> Stadt
> Schwarze
> Minderheit
> Ausgrenzung
> Person of Color
> Segregation
> USA
> Konferenzschrift
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Zusammenfassung: | Preface / Thaïsa Way -- Introduction / Eric Avila and Thaïsa Way – I. Landscapes of segregation : intentions and rationales. Developing spaces of exclusion / Paige Glotzer ; Quarantine, eradication, and prescription : how health segregated the American urban landscape / Sara Jensen Carr ; Open land for whom? : racial segregation and Chicago’s urban environment / Brian McCammack ; Painting race in space : racialized landscapes and the construction of peripheral territories in Colombia / Zannah Mae Matson – II. Segregation as discursive project. Following the cement supply chain : land use and racial capitalism in the Lehigh Valley / Vyta Pivo ; Where was Jim Crow? : Frank Lloyd Wright, Broadacre City, and the all-white American suburb / Dianne Harris ; A landscape of dissonance : erasing blackness in suburban Appalachia / Sharóne L. Tomer ; Making "A Waterfront for the World" : racial capitalism, indigeneity, and the marketing of Zibi in Canada's capital / Heather Dorries – III. Counternarratives and resistance. Communal gardens, defensive design, and urban apartheid in Chinatown : Merced, California, 1870-1910 / David Rouff and Verenize Arceo ; Urban markets, rural slums : segregation and resistance in California's "unincorporated" landscape / Alison B. Hirsch ; The hallowed grounds tour : revising and reimagining landscapes of race and slavery at the University of Alabama / Hilary Green ; From plantation to museum : the Whitney Plantation (Habitation Haydel) of the German Coast of Louisiana (1750-1860) / Ibrahima Seck ; "Monticello is a Black space" : the Getting Word Project and the future of African American history at Monticello / Niya Bates "Histories of racial segregation and its impacts have been the focus of urban research for over a century, and yet the role of space, place, and land in these narratives has been largely overlooked. How have land-use policies and land access shaped the experience of place? What markings have made evident the lived experience of segregation and its impacts? And how have individuals and communities resisted segregation in their own efforts to make place? With a focus on the Americas, the essays in this volume move across time and space to ask questions about place-making and community-building. They explore landscapes and their hidden struggles between segregation and resistance. Drawing upon the collective work of the "Segregation and Resistance in America's Urban Landscapes" symposium organized by Dumbarton Oaks in 2020, these histories of segregation and resistance consider how cultural and spatial practices of separation, identity, response, and revolt are shaped by place and, in turn, inform practices of place-making"-- |
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Beschreibung: | "Building on the Dumbarton Oaks Mellon Initiative in Urban Landscape Studies, particularly, the 2019 Colloquium on "Landscapes of Enslavement," our GLS 2020 symposium "Segregation and Resistance in America's Urban Landscapes" brings scholars together to engage with the urban landscape and environment in the Americas. This year, due to the COVID19 regulations, we have re-imagined the two-day symposium as a series of monthly virtual events to be shared over the summer months. This allows us to share the collective scholarship broadly and most significantly, more amenable to the virtual environment that we find ourselves in at this moment. The legacies of segregation, apartheid, and colonialism as they construct inequitable land use in cities are essential domains of study for landscape historians. Our scholars interrogate the means by which inequities, displacement, and spatial violence have informed the creation, development, and use of spaces and sites in the public realm of American cities. This scholarship contributes to a broader effort to expand landscape and garden history to actively engage in the scholarship of race, identity, and difference, within the frameworks of democracy and the urban public realm."--Registration email dated June 10, 2020.- |
Beschreibung: | xi, 392 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten, Pläne (teilweise farbig) 27,5 cm |
ISBN: | 9780884024965 978-0-88402-496-5 |