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Viewing 31–60 of 330 results.
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The Strange and Wonderful Subcultures of 1960s New York
From slum clearance to beatnik protests, how Greenwich Village became a battleground over race, art, and redevelopment.
by
J. Hoberman
via
Jacobin
on
July 19, 2025
A Time When the US Government Built Homes for Working-Class Americans to Deal With a Housing Crisis
During World War I, the government constructed entire communities for workers and their families, setting new standards for housing and neighborhood planning.
by
Eran Ben-Joseph
via
The Conversation
on
May 19, 2025
How White-Collar Criminals Plundered a Brooklyn Neighborhood
How East New York was ransacked by the real estate industry and abandoned by the city in the process.
by
Kristen Martin
via
The Nation
on
March 20, 2025
The Machine in the Garden
After decades of unchecked hazardous waste pollution, a Florida hamlet fights the developers eager to build homes there anyway.
by
Jordan Blumetti
via
Oxford American
on
March 18, 2025
How Progressives Froze the American Dream
The U.S. was once the world’s most geographically mobile society. Now we’re stuck in place—and that’s a very big problem.
by
Yoni Appelbaum
via
The Atlantic
on
February 10, 2025
From Street Gang to Revolutionaries
José ‘Cha Cha’ Jiménez and the Young Lords laid the groundwork for radical racial justice movements.
by
Felipe Hinojosa
via
Religion Dispatches
on
February 4, 2025
How Greenwich Village Became America’s Bohemia
Greenwich Village’s bohemian and queer culture roots lie in its history of incarcerating women, notably via the Women’s Court and House of Detention.
by
Hugh Ryan
via
The Gotham Center
on
November 20, 2024
Lincoln Center Destroyed Lives for the Sake of the Arts
The terrific new doc “San Juan Hill” chronicles the 1960s land grab that gave the Metropolitan Opera a home, while scattering longtime residents.
by
Elizabeth Zimmer
via
Village Voice
on
October 3, 2024
Urban Renewal in Virginia
Urban landscapes and communities all across the state of Virginia still bear the scars of urban renewal.
via
Encyclopedia Virginia
on
September 19, 2024
How Greenwich Village’s Iconic, Iconoclastic Music Scene Came to Be
Max Gordon, Prohibition, and the transformative creation of the Village Vanguard.
by
David Browne
via
Literary Hub
on
September 18, 2024
partner
To Understand What Could Happen on Election Day, Understand the Suburbs
Even as they've diversified, suburban politics have remained protectionist — often defying ideological categorization.
by
Becky M. Nicolaides
via
Made By History
on
August 15, 2024
What Adults Lost When Kids Stopped Playing in the Street
In many ways, a world built for cars has made life so much harder for grown-ups.
by
Stephanie H. Murray
via
The Atlantic
on
July 29, 2024
A Portrait of New York City by Air in 1924
Long before Google Maps, an intrepid inventor with three camera-equipped biplanes captured a groundbreaking view of Gotham in its Jazz Age glory.
by
Thomas J. Campanella
via
Bloomberg
on
June 29, 2024
How The U.S. Military Built San Francisco's LBGTQ+ Legacy
Many LGBTQ+ veterans settled in the city as it was a common point of disembarkation and a place of gender nonconformity.
by
Solcyré Burga
via
TIME
on
June 21, 2024
Nowhere But Up
In the wake of the 1964 Harlem riots, June Jordan and Buckminster Fuller’s plan to redesign the neighborhood suggested new possibilities for urban life.
by
Nikil Saval
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 8, 2024
This Map Lets You See How School Segregation Has Changed in Your Hometown
The new interactive tool accompanies a study of school enrollment data, which shows that segregation has worsened in recent decades.
by
Sarah Kuta
via
Smithsonian
on
May 17, 2024
The Pittsburgh School
Part of what defines Pittsburgh literature is the transcendent in the prosaic, the sacred in the profane. An intimation of beauty amid a kingdom of ugliness.
by
Ed Simon
via
Belt Magazine
on
May 13, 2024
Photographing a Lost New York
When I moved to Lower Manhattan in 1967, I decided to make a picture of every building in the neighbourhood before the city knocked it down.
by
Danny Lyon
via
New York Review of Books
on
April 25, 2024
How the Suburbs Became a Trap
Neighborhoods that once promised prosperity now offer crumbling infrastructure, aged housing stock, and social animus.
by
Caitlin Zaloom
via
The New Republic
on
April 18, 2024
The Anacostia and Residential Displacement in Postwar Southeast DC
The long-polluted Anacostia bisects the District’s Potomac waterfront, segregating the majority-Black Southeast from the rest of the capital city.
by
S. D. Hodell
via
The Metropole
on
April 17, 2024
Curtains for Lincoln Center
On the falsification of Lincoln Center’s history.
by
James Panero
via
The New Criterion
on
April 17, 2024
A New Orleans Neighborhood Confronts the Racist Legacy of a Toxic Stretch of Highway
In New Orleans, plans compete for how to deal with the harm done to minority communities by the Claiborne Expressway.
by
Drew Hawkins
via
KFF Health News
on
March 15, 2024
Class, Race, and the Formation of Urban Black Communities
A review of three new studies about how race and class intersect.
by
Randal Maurice Jelks
via
The Common Reader
on
February 21, 2024
partner
NIMBYs and YIMBYs Have More in Common Than It Might Seem
NIMBYs were citizen activists who set a model for participatory democracy that YIMBYs should follow.
by
Brian Balogh
via
Made By History
on
February 6, 2024
The Long Road to a Juneteenth Museum
Architects have made a Fort Worth neighborhood’s history part of the plan.
by
James Russell
via
Texas Observer
on
February 1, 2024
White America Facing Its Ghosts
The slow unraveling of a nation’s suburbs.
by
Benjamin Herold
via
Literary Hub
on
January 23, 2024
In 1967, a Black Man and a White Woman Bought a Home. American Politics Would Never Be the Same.
What happened to the Bailey family in the Detroit suburb of Warren became a flashpoint in the national battle over integration.
by
Zack Stanton
via
Politico Magazine
on
December 22, 2023
How Hurricane Katrina Changed Disaster Preparedness
Hurricane Katrina exposed deep inequities in federal disaster response. "We never felt so cut off in all our lives."
by
Yasmin Garaad
via
Scalawag
on
November 16, 2023
Boston's Map, Explained
Boston has more "made" land than any other American city.
by
Daniel Steiner
via
YouTube
on
October 26, 2023
Re-thinking Black (Im)mobility
The bicycle is a symbol of youth, but in the mid-twentieth century it also symbolized Black joy and mobility.
by
Nathan Cardon
via
Black Perspectives
on
September 20, 2023
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