Homeless Homeless
Politics and Culture in Modern America

Homeless

Poverty and Place in Urban America

    • $79.99
    • $79.99

Publisher Description

The homeless have the legal right to exist in modern American cities, yet antihomeless ordinances deny them access to many public spaces. How did previous generations of urban dwellers deal with the tensions between the rights of the homeless and those of other city residents? Ella Howard answers this question by tracing the history of skid rows from their rise in the late nineteenth century to their eradication in the mid-twentieth century.

Focusing on New York's infamous Bowery, Homeless analyzes the efforts of politicians, charity administrators, social workers, urban planners, and social scientists as they grappled with the problem of homelessness. The development of the Bowery from a respectable entertainment district to the nation's most infamous skid row offers a lens through which to understand national trends of homelessness and the complex relationship between poverty and place. Maintained by cities across the country as a type of informal urban welfare, skid rows anchored the homeless to a specific neighborhood, offering inhabitants places to eat, drink, sleep, and find work while keeping them comfortably removed from the urban middle classes. This separation of the homeless from the core of city life fostered simplistic and often inaccurate understandings of their plight. Most efforts to assist them centered on reforming their behavior rather than addressing structural economic concerns.

By midcentury, as city centers became more valuable, urban renewal projects and waves of gentrification destroyed skid rows and with them the public housing and social services they offered. With nowhere to go, the poor scattered across the urban landscape into public spaces, only to confront laws that effectively criminalized behavior associated with abject poverty. Richly detailed, Homeless lends insight into the meaning of homelessness and poverty in twentieth-century America and offers us a new perspective on the modern welfare system.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2013
9 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
288
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
SELLER
Perseus Books, LLC
SIZE
4.5
MB

More Books Like This

Race, Class, and the Struggle for Neighborhood in Washington, DC Race, Class, and the Struggle for Neighborhood in Washington, DC
2015
A Prison in the Woods A Prison in the Woods
2020
Rethinking the Welfare Rights Movement Rethinking the Welfare Rights Movement
2012
Deprivation, State Interventions and Urban Communities in Britain, 1968–79 Deprivation, State Interventions and Urban Communities in Britain, 1968–79
2017
Middle Class Union Middle Class Union
2017
The Evolution of the British Welfare State The Evolution of the British Welfare State
2017

Other Books in This Series

Set the World on Fire Set the World on Fire
2018
Only a Few Blocks to Cuba Only a Few Blocks to Cuba
2024
Hospital City, Health Care Nation Hospital City, Health Care Nation
2023
Illusions of Progress Illusions of Progress
2023
The Silver Women The Silver Women
2023
Contracting Freedom Contracting Freedom
2022