Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review"Rebecca J. Kinney's sophisticated and compelling study demonstrates the centrality of race-making to contemporary narratives of urban decline and revitalization."—David M. P. Freund, University of Maryland
"This is a welcome addition to studies in race and political economy."—Katherine B. Hankins, Georgia State University
"In Beautiful Wasteland Rebecca Kinney offers a sweeping cultural analysis of the images and symbolic landscapes that have made and remade our imaginary of the city of Detroit."—Jessa M. Loomis, University of Kentucky
"Beautiful Wasteland is a superb analysis of the role of popular culture in the production of Detroit as a 'postindustrial frontier'."—Sara Safransky, Vanderbilt University
"Beautiful Wasteland adds greatly to our understanding of why nostalgia is such a central part of how white working and middle class Americans construct their sense of self and the world."—Patrick Vitale, Eastern Connecticut State University
"It’s part personal memoir, part reporting, part academic dissection, drawing on life history, pop culture, photojournalism, architecture, TV news, and more."—Detroit Metro Times
"While modest in length and scope, Beautiful Wasteland provides a fascinating analysis of the cultural narratives that underpin both public policy and our everyday depictions of postindustrial cities."—The Michigan Historical Review
"Kinney’s book is a valuable contribution to the growing body of research on Detroit in that it makes visible the banal ways in which racism occurs through a cultural lens."—Urban Geography
"Kinney’s insistence that neoliberal market strategies cannot resolve structural inequities raises this succinct contribution to the critique of ‘ruin porn’ above the fray."—Indiana Magazine of History
"Crucially woven into this analysis is Kinney’s sensitivity to the persistence of race in narrative tropes, and the significance of what is unsaid and what is forgotten, as much as what is said and remembered."—Environment & Urbanization
"Historical and cultural geographers plus scholars with an interest in the US Midwest, manufacturing history, or urban history will likely find this a welcome addition to their shelves - or night stands: the book was a compelling read and difficult to put down."—Historical Geography
Table of ContentsContents
Introduction: Building a Beautiful Wasteland
1. It’s Turned into a Race Thing: White Innocence and the Old Neighborhood
2. Picturing Ruin and Possibility: The Rise of the Postindustrial Frontier
3. Fanning the Embers: Branding Detroit as a Phoenix Rising
4. Flickers of the American Dream: Filming Possibility in Decline
5. Feeding Detroit’s Rise: Provisions for Urban Pioneers
Conclusion: The Strait: A Tale of Two Cities
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index