by Brett Williams (Author)
In Upscaling Downtown, anthropologist Brett Williams provides an ethnography of a changing urban neighborhood that she calls Elm Valley. Located in Washington, D.C., Elm Valley was one of the first neighborhoods to draw middle-class property owners back to the inner city, but a faltering housing industry halted what might have been the rapid displacement of the poor. As a result, Elm Valley experienced several years of stalled gentrification. It was a period when very unlikely people lived side by side: black families who had migrated to the nation's capital from the Carolinas decades earlier, newly arrived refugees from Central America and Southeast Asia, and more prosperous whites. For Williams, a ten-year resident of Elm Valley, stalled gentrification offered a rare opportunity to observe how people 'with varied cultural traditions and economic resources saw and used the neighborhood in which they lived.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 157
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 10 Feb 1988
ISBN 10: 0801494192
ISBN 13: 9780801494192
A very good ethnographic study of a small community in Washington, DC.... Students of the new cultural studies, field research, and social theory will find the work to be strongest in its presentation of data.
* Choice *Upscaling Downtown is a clear, marvelously insightful analysis of the cultural dynamics of gentrification.
-- Karen Bordkin Sacks