城市里的白人:美国亚特兰大小五点的地盘制造史

Kayla Edgett, K. Hankins, Joseph Pierce
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摘要

几十年来,亚特兰大一直是美国南部和全国黑人文化和黑人发展的中心。在过去的15年里,这座城市开始向以白人为主的住宅区转变。与美国其他城市一样,这种趋势是由相对流动的中产阶级和中上层白人居民从郊区边缘搬回市中心推动的。虽然文献研究了流动白人居民的机制和位置偏好,但白人城市身份的特征往往被忽视。本文考察了美国佐治亚州亚特兰大市中心东部富裕社区之间的零售和娱乐区Little Five Points的案例。随着时间的推移,我们确定了围绕小五点阐述和运作的多重竞争白人,并展示了这些多重白人如何保留了基于财产和排斥的种族特权的关键共享属性。
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Whitenesses in the city: A history of place-making in Little Five Points, Atlanta, USA
ABSTRACT Atlanta has been known for decades as a center of Black culture and Black-owned development in the American South and in the nation. In the past 15 years, the city has begun shifting back toward a whiter residential base. As in other American cities, this trend is being driven by a move from the suburban fringe back to the center by relatively mobile, middle- and upper-middle class white residents. While literature has examined the mechanics and locational preferences of mobile white residents, the characteristics of white urban identity are often overlooked. This paper examines the case of Little Five Points, a retail and entertainment district sitting between affluent neighborhoods east of downtown Atlanta, Georgia, USA. We identify multiple and competing whitenesses articulated and operationalized around Little Five Points over time and show how these multiple whitenesses retain key shared attributes of racial privilege grounded in property and exclusion.
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