By examining a variety of sources - urban planning texts, city council documents, news media, and academic accounts - Jennifer J. Nelson illustrates how Africville went from a slum to a problem to be solved and, more recently, to a public space in which past violence is rendered invisible.
By examining a variety of sources - urban planning texts, city council documents, news media, and academic accounts - Jennifer J. Nelson illustrates how Africville went from a slum to a problem to be solved and, more recently, to a public space in which past violence is rendered invisible.
Jennifer Nelson is an independent research consultant and is an assistant professor in the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of Toronto.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments Authoring Africville: A Selected History Placing Africville: The Making of the Slum Knowing Africville: Telling Stories of Blackness Razing Africville: Fusing Spatial Management and Racist Discourse Reconciling Africville: The Politics of Dreaming and Forgetting Afterword Notes Index
Acknowledgments Authoring Africville: A Selected History Placing Africville: The Making of the Slum Knowing Africville: Telling Stories of Blackness Razing Africville: Fusing Spatial Management and Racist Discourse Reconciling Africville: The Politics of Dreaming and Forgetting Afterword Notes Index
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