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Chapter 5 - Writing the Big Apple in Chinese and Chinese American Literature

from Part I - Adaptation and Adjustment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2020

Ross Wilson
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham
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Summary

A history of the housed and the unhoused in New York literature still needs to be written. In this chapter, I turn the spotlight on two moments, the 1890s and the 1990s, which have both been framed as moments of specific urban crises: the Progressive Era and its housing reform movement; and the era of Reaganomics and its gentrification. In both moments, the development of capitalism in New York City had manufactured a sense of crisis that helped sanitize the city and discipline the poor. This was the goal of the housing reform movement when it framed the need to prevent a ‘spread’ of ‘pauperism’ from Downtown to the business, retail, and real estate districts beyond Washington Square; and that of Mayor Giuliani’s city, who removed the homeless to shelters at the city’s periphery in order to sanitize the city for global economy. Both of these moments have prompted a great productivity not only in journalism, sociology, political studies and the like, but also of narrative texts that conceptualise a city characterised through questions of social belonging, of the coexistence of the housed and the unhoused, and of the contingencies of concepts of ‘home’ and ‘homelessness.’

Type
Chapter
Information
New York
A Literary History
, pp. 61 - 76
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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