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Posts in Race & Ethnicity
“Little Pittsburgh”: Creating an Industrialized Landscape in Hunts Point

“Little Pittsburgh”: Creating an Industrialized Landscape in Hunts Point

By Sam Hege

Since the 1950s, New York City has relied on the South Bronx to handle the vital and taxing components of its processing and distribution infrastructures. This strategy began with the decision to relocate the Terminal Market from downtown Manhattan to the Hunts Point peninsula, and has since been used to justify the siting of waste transfer stations, prisons, and industrial processing facilities. This consolidation of waste and congestion to the South Bronx supported the emergence of Manhattan as a tourist destination and financial capital, embodied by the redevelopment of the Manhattan market space as part of the World Trade Center project.

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Review: Clifford Mason's Macbeth in Harlem

Review: Clifford Mason's Macbeth in Harlem

Reviewed by Kristen Wright

Clifford Mason’s Macbeth in Harlem traces how African-American theater artists shaped theater in the United States, beginning in the early 19th century and ending in the mid-20th century. Mason reveals how events gave rise to different Black performers and movements, beginning with Harlem’s particular contributions to Broadway and concluding with a discussion of the post-World War II conditions that gave rise to Lorraine Hansberry’s 1959 play A Raisin in The Sun.

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Those Who Know Don’t Say: Interview with Garrett Felber

Those Who Know Don’t Say: Interview with Garrett Felber

Interviewed by Kenneth M. Donovan

Today on the blog, Kenneth Donovan interviews Garrett Felber about his recently published book Those Who Know Don’t Say: The Nation of Islam, The Black Freedom Struggle, and the Carceral State. Those Who Know, which reevaluates the civil rights activism and legacy of the Nation of Islam, was shortlisted for the 2020 Museum of African American History Stone Book Award.

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“My Colored House is on Fire”: Children, Housing, and the Architecture of Black Charity in San Juan Hill

“My Colored House is on Fire”: Children, Housing, and the Architecture of Black Charity in San Juan Hill

By Jessica Larson

Following their displacement from the Tenderloin in the early 1900s, Manhattan’s largest Black population moved northward and sought to rebuild their community’s infrastructure in San Juan Hill, an area bounded by 59th Street to the south, 65th Street to the north, Amsterdam Avenue to east, and West End Avenue to the west. Black reformers — the majority of whom were women — worked to construct a neighborhood that offered to its residents missing social welfare services.

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The World That Fear Made: Interview with Jason T. Sharples

The World That Fear Made: Interview with Jason T. Sharples

Interviewed by Madeline Lafuse

Today on the blog, Madeline Lafuse speaks with Jason T. Sharples, author of the recently published The World That Fear Made : Slave Revolts and Conspiracy Scares in Early America, about how the fear of slave conspiracies shaped New York City and early America.

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Interview with Douglas J. Flowe on Uncontrollable Blackness: African American Men and Criminality in Jim Crow New York

Interview with Douglas J. Flowe on Uncontrollable Blackness: African American Men and Criminality in Jim Crow New York

Interviewed by Willie Mack

African American men in early 20th-century New York City faced social and economic segregation, and a racist criminal justice system punctuated by violence by the police and white citizens. In Uncontrollable Blackness: African American Men and Criminality in Jim Crow New York, Dr. Douglas Flowe interrogates the effects that segregation, crime, and violence had on black men, and how these men were forced to navigate the “crucible of black criminality” in Jim Crow Era New York City in order to survive.

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Review: Thomas J. Shelley's Upper West Side Catholics: Liberal Catholicism in a Conservative Archdiocese: The Church of the Ascension, New York City, 1895-2020

Parish History on New York City's Upper West Side

Reviewed by Susie Pak

Thomas J. Shelley has added to his already substantial oeuvre of New York Catholic history with the publication of Upper West Side Catholics: Liberal Catholicism in a Conservative Archdiocese: The Church of the Ascension, New York City, 1895-2020 (New York: Empire State Editions, 2020).[1] His deep and broad understanding of New York’s Catholic institutions provides the context for his study of the Church of the Ascension, which was founded in 1895 on the Upper West Side. While his history of Ascension starts from its founding, Shelley’s book offers an extended view of the neighborhood during the 1960s and 1970s, a period when demographic transition overlapped with economic decline and produced immense political conflicts that destabilized New York’s institutions, including the Catholic Church.

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“Ten Thousand Bigamists in New York”: The Criminalization of Jewish Immigrants Using White Slavery Panics

“Ten Thousand Bigamists in New York”:
The Criminalization of Jewish Immigrants Using White Slavery Panics

By Mia Brett

The late 19th century and early 20th century saw a huge influx of Jewish immigrants settling in New York City. Eastern European Yiddish speaking immigrants fled the Pale Settlements due to violent pogroms and punitive decrees after the assassination of Tsar Alexander II in 1881.[1] This rise in immigration created a backlash of nativism and criminalization. In particular, anti-Jewish bigotry in New York City’s criminal justice system began to take the form of large-scale stereotypical assumptions as police, judges, prosecutors, and investigators became more familiar with Jewish immigrants from Russia and Poland.

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Monuments of Colonial New York: The Tulip Tree and 'Signal'

Monuments of Colonial New York: The Tulip Tree and 'Signal'

Lisa Blee and John C. Winters

This week Gotham presents a six-part series on monuments, statues, and commemorations in / about colonial New York City. Recognizing that one of the more recent debates over public memory has been the conflict over Columbus / Indigenous People’s Day, we begin with Lisa Blee and John C. Winters, who examine monuments of and by Native peoples in Manhattan.

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“Traitors In Our Midst”: Race, Corrections, and the 1970 Tombs Uprising

“Traitors In Our Midst”:
Race, Corrections, and the 1970 Tombs Uprising

By Willie Mack

In 1966, newly elected New York City Republican Mayor John V. Lindsay appointed George F. McGrath as Commissioner of Correction. McGrath was previously the commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Correction and was widely known as a respected and progressive liberal penologist. But by 1969, the New York City jails were in worse condition than ever before.

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