Description

Book Synopsis
Thomas Heise identifies and investigates the emerging “gentrification plot” in contemporary crime fiction. He considers recent novels that depict the sweeping transformations of five iconic neighborhoods—the Lower East Side, Chinatown, Red Hook, Harlem, and Bedford-Stuyvesant.

Trade Review
Compelling and sophisticated, The Gentrification Plot offers richly detailed readings of recent NYC crime fiction that delineate and critique the destructive effects of gentrification. Heise's attention to shifts in geography and genre adds to the critical framework for reading, understanding, and appreciating the ethical stakes of contemporary fiction. -- Kathy Knapp, author of American Unexceptionalism: The Everyman and the Suburban Novel After 9/11
In this excellent book, Thomas Heise argues that gentrification transformed not just the neighborhoods of New York City but also the city’s crime novels. Providing a new and inventive lens for reading crime fiction, Heise convincingly shows how the quintessentially urban genre of the crime novel found itself unavoidably implicated in the politics of gentrification and real estate speculation. At once an innovative history of contemporary crime fiction and an eye-opening account of gentrification’s impact on individual neighborhoods and communities, The Gentrification Plot is a major work in an important field. -- Theodore Martin, author of Contemporary Drift: Genre, Historicism, and the Problem of the Present
In this groundbreaking book, Heise unlocks the multiple meanings of “plot” to cast new light on the complex links among crime, property, policing, race, and literature. With a diverse group of contemporary novelists as his guide, he brilliantly shows us how the gentrification of New York City stands in for and enacts the logic of crime as much as murder and theft. One of the best books on its subject I have ever read. -- Andrew Pepper, author of Unwilling Executioner: Crime Fiction and the State
The range of Heise’s scholarship is impressive and diverse, and his analyses are intelligently presented. He writes with assurance about and passion for his subject. The Gentrification Plot is a significant contribution to crime fiction scholarship. * Choice Reviews *
[A] highly recommended read for those who are fascinated by New York City as a matter of investigation. Readers who loved the meta-detective stories in The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster, or essay collections like The Lonely City by Olivia Laing particularly for the discourse around Manhattan law-and-order policing of the 2000s, will find in The Gentrification Plot new, precious insights about contemporary socio-spatial transformations. * LSE Review of Books *
The Gentrification Plot provides a nuanced, expertly read literary account of neoliberalization, changing modes of production, racial capitalism, and the social production of space. It is a book that could only be written by someone deeply intimate with New York City itself—able to see its impasses all the more clearly because of love[.] * American Literary History *

Table of Contents
Introduction: Death and Life in Postindustrial New York
1. The Lower East Side: Cops, Culture, and the Creative Class
2. Chinatown: Policing the Ethnic Enclave
3. Red Hook: Blood on the Industrial Waterfront
4. Harlem: Uptown Dead Zones
5. Bedford-Stuyvesant: White Boys in the Hood
Epilogue: Escape from New York
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

The Gentrification Plot New York and the

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    A Paperback / softback by Thomas Heise

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      View other formats and editions of The Gentrification Plot New York and the by Thomas Heise

      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 21/12/2021
      ISBN13: 9780231200196, 978-0231200196
      ISBN10: 0231200196

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Thomas Heise identifies and investigates the emerging “gentrification plot” in contemporary crime fiction. He considers recent novels that depict the sweeping transformations of five iconic neighborhoods—the Lower East Side, Chinatown, Red Hook, Harlem, and Bedford-Stuyvesant.

      Trade Review
      Compelling and sophisticated, The Gentrification Plot offers richly detailed readings of recent NYC crime fiction that delineate and critique the destructive effects of gentrification. Heise's attention to shifts in geography and genre adds to the critical framework for reading, understanding, and appreciating the ethical stakes of contemporary fiction. -- Kathy Knapp, author of American Unexceptionalism: The Everyman and the Suburban Novel After 9/11
      In this excellent book, Thomas Heise argues that gentrification transformed not just the neighborhoods of New York City but also the city’s crime novels. Providing a new and inventive lens for reading crime fiction, Heise convincingly shows how the quintessentially urban genre of the crime novel found itself unavoidably implicated in the politics of gentrification and real estate speculation. At once an innovative history of contemporary crime fiction and an eye-opening account of gentrification’s impact on individual neighborhoods and communities, The Gentrification Plot is a major work in an important field. -- Theodore Martin, author of Contemporary Drift: Genre, Historicism, and the Problem of the Present
      In this groundbreaking book, Heise unlocks the multiple meanings of “plot” to cast new light on the complex links among crime, property, policing, race, and literature. With a diverse group of contemporary novelists as his guide, he brilliantly shows us how the gentrification of New York City stands in for and enacts the logic of crime as much as murder and theft. One of the best books on its subject I have ever read. -- Andrew Pepper, author of Unwilling Executioner: Crime Fiction and the State
      The range of Heise’s scholarship is impressive and diverse, and his analyses are intelligently presented. He writes with assurance about and passion for his subject. The Gentrification Plot is a significant contribution to crime fiction scholarship. * Choice Reviews *
      [A] highly recommended read for those who are fascinated by New York City as a matter of investigation. Readers who loved the meta-detective stories in The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster, or essay collections like The Lonely City by Olivia Laing particularly for the discourse around Manhattan law-and-order policing of the 2000s, will find in The Gentrification Plot new, precious insights about contemporary socio-spatial transformations. * LSE Review of Books *
      The Gentrification Plot provides a nuanced, expertly read literary account of neoliberalization, changing modes of production, racial capitalism, and the social production of space. It is a book that could only be written by someone deeply intimate with New York City itself—able to see its impasses all the more clearly because of love[.] * American Literary History *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Death and Life in Postindustrial New York
      1. The Lower East Side: Cops, Culture, and the Creative Class
      2. Chinatown: Policing the Ethnic Enclave
      3. Red Hook: Blood on the Industrial Waterfront
      4. Harlem: Uptown Dead Zones
      5. Bedford-Stuyvesant: White Boys in the Hood
      Epilogue: Escape from New York
      Acknowledgments
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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