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This was a tough book to get through due to the "prose". The style of writing was like a high school freshman trying to fake it as an academic. It was really tough to follow the topic of a sentence, let alone a paragraph or chapter. By reading very slowly and often rereading large passages, I eventually could figure out what the author was trying to say. Sadly, what he was trying to say is just a collection of anecdotes from gentrification-conscious upper-middle classed families who were trying to buy a house. The moral of the book was that even the most well intentioned people are still gentrifiers.
I was really hoping to find an academic book that helps quantify what gentrification is and how we can alleviate the harm it causes. But what I found was just another book on how gentrification is bad because 'when I was a kid neighborhoods had character! Neighborhoods now a days are all cookie cutter! Trader Joe's sucks!' I know many people resonate with that feeling, but its a subjective viewpoint. In an academic focused book I was really hoping for a quantitative analysis.
On the plus side, the author quite effectively points out that anyone trying to buy a home is going to contribute to gentrification in someway. Even if you're the same ethnicity of the majority ethnic group in a neighborhood, your influx of money is going to support gentrification through increasing property values and increased demand for gentrifying services. Even if you hold a PhD in social studies with a focus in gentrification, you're still going to want to do what's best for your family which typically means contributing to gentrification.
I was really hoping the author would move on to the causes of this behavior, but instead he just went into anecdote after anecdote reinforcing why that behavior happens. There was not much to gain after reading the first chapter.
I was really hoping to find an academic book that helps quantify what gentrification is and how we can alleviate the harm it causes. But what I found was just another book on how gentrification is bad because 'when I was a kid neighborhoods had character! Neighborhoods now a days are all cookie cutter! Trader Joe's sucks!' I know many people resonate with that feeling, but its a subjective viewpoint. In an academic focused book I was really hoping for a quantitative analysis.
On the plus side, the author quite effectively points out that anyone trying to buy a home is going to contribute to gentrification in someway. Even if you're the same ethnicity of the majority ethnic group in a neighborhood, your influx of money is going to support gentrification through increasing property values and increased demand for gentrifying services. Even if you hold a PhD in social studies with a focus in gentrification, you're still going to want to do what's best for your family which typically means contributing to gentrification.
I was really hoping the author would move on to the causes of this behavior, but instead he just went into anecdote after anecdote reinforcing why that behavior happens. There was not much to gain after reading the first chapter.
3.5 Stars.
Gentrifier is an interesting take on the topic of gentrification. The authors are three upper-middle class academics of differing races and childhood backgrounds who all identify as "gentrifiers." This book is an academic text, but I did find it to be written in more accessible ways than many academic writings. The authors sought to tackle the nuances of the topic of gentrification in hopes of starting a conversation and finding ways to deal with a phenomenon that seems to be an inevitable consequence of a class stratified world.
The authors make it clear that, while they do believe that gentrification is a complicated issue, they do not seek to dismiss it or excuse its negative effects as a result. I believe they did a decent job of showing the complexities of middle class peoples intentions and decisions as gentrifiers, the different type of systems and choices that govern gentrification, the different belief systems used to describe gentrification, and the different types of people who can be gentrifiers. They also offer several tools and systems to understand gentrification such as a multi-tool of micro-level manifestations of gentrification, a wheel of gentrifier types, a comprehensive breakdown of the "de-s" and "re-s" that form the foundation of gentrification, and others.
What I appreciate most in this book is how much it sort of calls out many people, who talk about and fight gentrification, as gentrifiers. Because gentrification is a dirty word, many leftists who are indeed big parts of the gentrification process will refuse to see themselves as such. This book calls on them to identify themselves properly. It describes several levels of gentrification- including early and late gentrifiers. It shows that, due to larger systems of capitalism, classism, and white supremacy, even the most well intentioned of gentrifiers- who almost always think they are not gentrifiers- can be part of creating the same issues that careless developers create. They discuss how many leftist critiques of oppressive systems and gentrification are often at odds with each other such as calling out environmental racism in one breath, then claiming that reducing pollution in a poor community is bad because it will gentrify the community.
They bring up something else I had not heard about before which was that Black and other people of color can be gentrifiers intraracially if they are upper-middle class. Many discussions of gentrification I have heard reduce it to white people moving into neighborhoods of color, but this book takes it a step further to discuss how middle class people of multiple races can still serve as gentrifiers. I am a person who constantly wonders where I fit into these discussions because I am under the poverty line, disabled and likely permanently unable to work, trans and queer, but am also white, in my 30s, college educated, counter-culturey looking, and like many things that are considered gentrifying businesses such as Trader Joe's. If I lose my housing due to gentrification in my neighborhood, I am not exactly sure where I could go that I could afford and not also do damage as a gentrifier. This book offers some tools to look at myself and these things that I did not have before reading it due to the more reductive arguments that occur about gentrification.
My biggest criticism of the book is that the voices of the people most adversely affected by gentrification were underrepresented. Most of the book seems to center upper-middle class gentrifiers and their struggles to find neighborhoods and housing that work for them. This partially makes sense as the authors are analyzing their own experiences in order to lead by example. Most of the quotes criticizing gentrifiers come from academics or from Spike Lee- who could now be seen as a gentrifier by some of the authors' standards. There were a couple sentence-long quotes here and there from poor people who were displaced or harmed by gentrification, but overall I wanted to hear more from them and understand how they fit into all of this at a more personal level. Otherwise- and I am sure this was not the intention of the authors- it could come off as the gentrifiers being centered in the discussion of gentrification. Given that the end of the book sells us on a transformative approach that specifically involves the people most likely to be harmed and displaced by gentrification, making sure any improvements in their community are to their benefit, it would have made more sense to me that they would have been featured more in this book. I think that because of this flaw, this book can appear to be defending the harm done by gentrification when I believe that is the opposite of what the authors intended to do.
Overall this book sheds a lot of light on complicated topics I have wanted a greater understanding of. I think it offers some great tools, breakdowns of terminology, and discussions of arguments surrounding gentrification. I think it can serve as a good conversation piece regarding the topic.
Gentrifier is an interesting take on the topic of gentrification. The authors are three upper-middle class academics of differing races and childhood backgrounds who all identify as "gentrifiers." This book is an academic text, but I did find it to be written in more accessible ways than many academic writings. The authors sought to tackle the nuances of the topic of gentrification in hopes of starting a conversation and finding ways to deal with a phenomenon that seems to be an inevitable consequence of a class stratified world.
The authors make it clear that, while they do believe that gentrification is a complicated issue, they do not seek to dismiss it or excuse its negative effects as a result. I believe they did a decent job of showing the complexities of middle class peoples intentions and decisions as gentrifiers, the different type of systems and choices that govern gentrification, the different belief systems used to describe gentrification, and the different types of people who can be gentrifiers. They also offer several tools and systems to understand gentrification such as a multi-tool of micro-level manifestations of gentrification, a wheel of gentrifier types, a comprehensive breakdown of the "de-s" and "re-s" that form the foundation of gentrification, and others.
What I appreciate most in this book is how much it sort of calls out many people, who talk about and fight gentrification, as gentrifiers. Because gentrification is a dirty word, many leftists who are indeed big parts of the gentrification process will refuse to see themselves as such. This book calls on them to identify themselves properly. It describes several levels of gentrification- including early and late gentrifiers. It shows that, due to larger systems of capitalism, classism, and white supremacy, even the most well intentioned of gentrifiers- who almost always think they are not gentrifiers- can be part of creating the same issues that careless developers create. They discuss how many leftist critiques of oppressive systems and gentrification are often at odds with each other such as calling out environmental racism in one breath, then claiming that reducing pollution in a poor community is bad because it will gentrify the community.
They bring up something else I had not heard about before which was that Black and other people of color can be gentrifiers intraracially if they are upper-middle class. Many discussions of gentrification I have heard reduce it to white people moving into neighborhoods of color, but this book takes it a step further to discuss how middle class people of multiple races can still serve as gentrifiers. I am a person who constantly wonders where I fit into these discussions because I am under the poverty line, disabled and likely permanently unable to work, trans and queer, but am also white, in my 30s, college educated, counter-culturey looking, and like many things that are considered gentrifying businesses such as Trader Joe's. If I lose my housing due to gentrification in my neighborhood, I am not exactly sure where I could go that I could afford and not also do damage as a gentrifier. This book offers some tools to look at myself and these things that I did not have before reading it due to the more reductive arguments that occur about gentrification.
My biggest criticism of the book is that the voices of the people most adversely affected by gentrification were underrepresented. Most of the book seems to center upper-middle class gentrifiers and their struggles to find neighborhoods and housing that work for them. This partially makes sense as the authors are analyzing their own experiences in order to lead by example. Most of the quotes criticizing gentrifiers come from academics or from Spike Lee- who could now be seen as a gentrifier by some of the authors' standards. There were a couple sentence-long quotes here and there from poor people who were displaced or harmed by gentrification, but overall I wanted to hear more from them and understand how they fit into all of this at a more personal level. Otherwise- and I am sure this was not the intention of the authors- it could come off as the gentrifiers being centered in the discussion of gentrification. Given that the end of the book sells us on a transformative approach that specifically involves the people most likely to be harmed and displaced by gentrification, making sure any improvements in their community are to their benefit, it would have made more sense to me that they would have been featured more in this book. I think that because of this flaw, this book can appear to be defending the harm done by gentrification when I believe that is the opposite of what the authors intended to do.
Overall this book sheds a lot of light on complicated topics I have wanted a greater understanding of. I think it offers some great tools, breakdowns of terminology, and discussions of arguments surrounding gentrification. I think it can serve as a good conversation piece regarding the topic.
informative
reflective
medium-paced
informative
reflective
slow-paced
informative
reflective
medium-paced