Last project standing : civics and sympathy in post-welfare Chicago

Author(s)

    • Fennell, Catherine

Bibliographic Information

Last project standing : civics and sympathy in post-welfare Chicago

Catherine Fennell

(A Quadrant book)

University of Minnesota Press, c2015

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 277-293) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In 1995 a half-vacant public housing project on Chicago's Near West Side fell to the wrecking ball. The demolition and reconstruction of the Henry Horner housing complex ushered in the most ambitious urban housing experiment of its kind: smaller, mixed-income, and partially privatized developments that, the thinking went, would mitigate the insecurity, isolation, and underemployment that plagued Chicago's infamously troubled public housing projects. Focusing on Horner's redevelopment, Catherine Fennell asks how Chicago's endeavor transformed everyday built environments into laboratories for teaching urbanites about the rights and obligations of belonging to a city and a nation that seemed incapable of taking care of its most destitute citizens. Drawing on more than three years of ethnographic and archival research, she shows how collisions with everything from haywire heating systems and decaying buildings to silent neighbors became an education in the possibilities, but also the limits, of collective care, concern, and protection in the aftermath of welfare failure. As she documents how the materiality of both the unsuccessful older projects and the recently emerging housing fosters feelings of belonging and loss, her work engages larger debates in critical anthropology and poverty studies-and opens a vital new perspective on the politics of space, race, and development in urban America

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Across Damen Part I. Sympathy "Toward a Better Life" 2. The Many Harms of Staying Here 3. Project Heat and Sensory Politics Part II. Civics Radio Rumors 4. Experiments in Vulnerability 5. The City, the Grassroots, the Poverty Pimps Part III. Publics Resurrections 6. The Museum of Resilience Epilogue: Raising Sympathetic Publics Notes Bibliography Index

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