Selling the Lower East Side: Culture, Real Estate, and Resistance in New York City

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U of Minnesota Press, 2000 - Political Science - 361 pages
The Lower East Side of Manhattan is rich in stories -- of poor immigrants who flocked there in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; of beatniks, hippies, and artists who peopled it mid-century; and of the real estate developers and politicians who have always shaped what is now termed the "East Village". Today, the musical Rent plays on Broadway to a mostly white and suburban audience, MTV exploits the neighborhood's newly trendy squalor in a film promotion, and on the Internet a cyber soap opera and travel-related Web pages lure members of the middle class to enjoy a commodified and sanitized version of the neighborhood.

In this sweeping account, Christopher Mele analyzes the political and cultural forces that have influenced the development of this distinctive community. He describes late nineteenth-century notions of the Lower East Side as a place of entrenched poverty, ethnic plurality, political activism, and "low" culture that elicited feelings of revulsion and fear among the city's elite and middle classes. The resulting -- and ongoing -- struggle between government and residents over affordable and decent housing has in turn affected real estate practices and urban development policies. Selling the Lower East Side recounts the resistance tactics used by community residents, as well as the impulse on the part of some to perpetuate the image of the neighborhood as dangerous, romantic, and bohemian, clinging to the marginality that has been central to the identity of the East Village and subverting attempts to portray it as "new and improved".

Ironically, this very image of urban grittiness has been appropriated by a cultural marketplace hungry for new fodder.Mele explores the ways that developers, media executives, and others have coopted the area's characteristics -- analyzing the East Village as a "style provider" where what is being marketed is "difference". The result is a visionary look at how political and economic actions transform neighborhoods and at what happens when a neighborhood is what is being "consumed".

 

Contents

The Struggle over Space
3
Different and Inferior The Ghetto at the Turn of the Century
33
Utopian Metropolis versus the Legacy of the Slum
80
Reengineering the Ghetto Ethnicity Race and Cultural Divisions in the 1950s
122
A Brief Psychedelic Detour Hip Urban Renewal and the Invention of the East Village
155
Urban Malaise Community Abandonment and Underground Subcultures of Decay
182
Developing the East Village Eighties Counterculture in the Service of Urban Capital
222
Targeting the Middle Class Cultures of Resistance and Class Warfare
257
The Production of Desire Urban Development and Community Resistance at the End of the Twentieth Century
283
Notes
313
Bibliography
339
Index
359
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Page 352 - Chester Rapkin, The Real Estate Market In an Urban Renewal Area (New York, New York City Planning Commission, 1959). Rapkin also documents the almost complete ending of new construction, the termination of institutional mortgage flows, the acquisition of property by the absentee "slumlord" investor and the shift to furnished room occupancy.

About the author (2000)

Christopher Mele is assistant professor of sociology at the State University of New York at Buffalo.

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