Chicago on the Make: Power and Inequality in a Modern City

Référence bibliographique :

Andrew Diamond. Chicago on the Make: Power and Inequality in a Modern City, Oakland, University of California Press, 2020 [2017]

Auteur.e.s membre de l'UMR : Andrew Diamond

Type : Ouvrage
Année : 2020

Axe(s) de recherche : 1. Relations internationales, espaces et mondialisations, 2. Pratiques et cultures politiques, 3. L’Europe comme civilisation matérielle en transitions

Présentation :

“Effectively details the long history of racial conflict and abuse that has ledto Chicago becoming one of America’s most segregated cities. . . . A wealthof material.”—New York Times

 

Winner of the 2017 Jon Gjerde Prize, Midwestern History Association

Winner of the 2017 Award of Superior Achievement, Illinois State Historical Society

 

Heralded as America’s quintessentially modern city, Chicago has attracted the gaze of journalists, novelists, essayists, and scholars as much as any city in thenation. And, yet, few historians have attempted big-picture narratives of the city’s transformation over the twentieth century. Chicago on the Make traces the evolution of the city’s politics, culture, and economy as it grew from an unruly tangle of rail yards, slaughterhouses, factories, tenement houses, and fiercely defended ethnic neighborhoods into a truly global urban center. Reinterpreting the familiar narrative that Chicago’s autocratic machine politics shaped its institutions and public life, Andrew J. Diamond demonstrates how the grassroots politics of race crippled progressive forces and enabled an alliance of downtown business interests to promote a neoliberal agenda that created stark inequalities. Chicago on the Make takes the story into the twenty-first century, chronicling Chicago’s deeply entrenched social and urbanproblems as the city ascended to the national stage during the Obama years.

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