Demolition Means Progress Demolition Means Progress
Historical Studies of Urban America

Demolition Means Progress

Flint, Michigan, and the Fate of the American Metropolis

    • ¥1,500
    • ¥1,500

発行者による作品情報

"Tracks the fall of Flint, Michigan, once one of the nation's greatest industrial towns, now one of its poorest cities . . . compelling [and] powerful." —Kevin Boyle, National Book Award–winning author of Arc of Justice

In 1997, after General Motors shuttered a massive complex of factories in the gritty industrial city of Flint, Michigan, signs were placed around the empty facility reading, "Demolition Means Progress," suggesting that the struggling metropolis could not move forward to greatness until the old plants met the wrecking ball. Much more than a trite corporate slogan, the phrase encapsulates the operating ethos of the nation's metropolitan leadership from at least the 1930s to the present.


Again and again, the leaders of Flint and other municipalities tried to revitalize their communities by demolishing outdated and inefficient structures and institutions and overseeing numerous urban renewal campaigns—many of which yielded only more impoverished and more divided metropolises. After decades of these efforts, the dawn of the twenty-first century found Flint one of the most racially segregated and economically polarized metropolitan areas in the nation.


In one of the most comprehensive works yet written on the history of inequality and metropolitan development in modern America, Andrew R. Highsmith uses the case of Flint to explain how the perennial quest for urban renewal—even more than white flight, corporate abandonment, and other forces—contributed to mass suburbanization, racial and economic division, deindustrialization, and political fragmentation. Challenging much of the conventional wisdom about structural inequality and the roots of the nation's "urban crisis," Demolition Means Progress shows in vivid detail how public policies and programs designed to revitalize the Flint area ultimately led to the hardening of social divisions.


"Brilliantly narrates the entire arc of 20th-century American industrialization at the scale of a single city, Flint, Michigan, and its suburbs . . . a remarkable book." —Robert Self, author of American Babylon: Race and the Struggle for Postwar Oakland

ジャンル
歴史
発売日
2022年
12月22日
言語
EN
英語
ページ数
399
ページ
発行者
The University of Chicago Press
販売元
OpenRoad Integrated Media, LLC
サイズ
13.6
MB
Newcomers Newcomers
2022年
Mapping Decline Mapping Decline
2014年
Frog Hollow Frog Hollow
2022年
Urban Lowlands Urban Lowlands
2020年
Jacksonville After the Fire, 1901–1919 Jacksonville After the Fire, 1901–1919
2018年
The Social Order of a Frontier Community The Social Order of a Frontier Community
2023年
Making the Unequal Metropolis Making the Unequal Metropolis
2022年
The World of Juliette Kinzie The World of Juliette Kinzie
2022年
After Redlining After Redlining
2022年
Sun Ra's Chicago Sun Ra's Chicago
2022年
Metropolitan Jews Metropolitan Jews
2022年
Brown in the Windy City Brown in the Windy City
2022年