A People's Atlas of Detroit

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Product Details
Price
$39.99
Publisher
Wayne State University Press
Publish Date
Pages
352
Dimensions
10.0 X 8.0 X 0.8 inches | 2.15 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780814342978

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About the Author

Linda Campbell is a Detroit resident and director of Building Movement Project, Detroit and Detroit People's Platform.
Andrew Newman is an associate professor of anthropology at Wayne State University.
Sara Safransky is a human geographer and assistant professor at Vanderbilt University.
Tim Stallmann is a cartographer and a worker-owner at Research Action Design.

Reviews

Reading the almanac in this extraordinary time makes you wonder what kind of city Detroit will become after the post-pandemic economic dislocation takes root. What will happen to the city budget, and already bare-bones emergency services? Will redevelopment stop? Will Detroit become a more equitable city? If those questions interest you, "A People's Atlas of Detroit" is very worthy of your attention.

-- "Deadline Detroit"

The Atlas' ability to traverse these boundaries of what academia will legitimize by collaborating with activists to produce a well-researched catalogue of historic and contemporary narratives from activists is an important addition to scholarship in Detroit and the field of planning. The authors provide an instructive example of how the richness of community narratives can be assembled to showcase their significance across the landscape of Detroit and in ways that are of interest to many audiences.

--Lisa Berglund "Progressive City"

Valuable to people in other places engaged in similar struggles over land, agriculture, infrastructure and governance. This book provides a chart for those interested in engaging in such a project. We need A People's Atlas of every city, as an organizing tool and a document of struggles everywhere.

--Rich Heyman "Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography"

The information contained in this book is vital in understanding the social, political, racial, and economic underpinnings that have formed the Detroit we see today. A failure to understand the phenomena laid out in A People's Atlas of Detroit leaves one with the flawed perspective of Detroit is a city that is deviant, dysfunctional, and dangerous. And that perspective must be smashed.

--Jason Jordan "Official Historian of the City of Detroit"

Succeeds in re-presenting Detroit as a vital and living city with strong activist histories of ordinary people surviving and battling systemic racial injustices, inequalities and dispossession. It also provides an inspiring example of how other cities might create their own distinctive Atlases through similar methods, bringing to light peoples' histories of struggle against injustice and exploitation and demonstrating new ways of creating vital and democratic urban centers through an ethics of care, where we practice new ways of being in the world and with each other.

-- "LivingMaps Network"

They have produced an interesting book, with an impressive pedigree and purpose that extends well beyond the primarily academic focus of most atlases. So well beyond, in fact, that many readers will take issue with calling it an atlas (a term typically defined as a book of maps or charts), as very few of its pages are devoted to maps, and many of those are used solely to designate the locations of those who contributed content to specific chapters.

--Russell S. Kirby "Cartographic Perspectives"

A book which radical cartographers, environmentalists and community activists alike will want on their shelves. It is beautifully produced with full color photographs and maps.

-- "LivingMaps Network"

Detroit organizing has always been among the smartest, sharpest, and innovative work throughout people's history. This is a project that provides more evidence of this fact--a thoughtful, important resource developed by the people in the very best tradition of community-led and -centered research and analysis. A People's Atlas of Detroit proves once again that if we seek to understand a place, we must break with the extractive practice of traditional 'research' and listen to the people who make it what it is.

--Makani Themba "author and chief strategist at Higher Ground Change Strategies"