In this Book

The Creative Underclass: Youth, Race, and the Gentrifying City

Book
Tyler Denmead
2019
Published by: Duke University Press
summary
As an undergraduate at Brown University, Tyler Denmead founded New Urban Arts, a nationally recognized arts and humanities program primarily for young people of color in Providence, Rhode Island. Along with its positive impact, New Urban Arts, under his leadership, became entangled in Providence's urban renewal efforts that harmed the very youth it served. As in many deindustrialized cities, Providence's leaders viewed arts, culture, and creativity as a means to drive property development and attract young, educated, and affluent white people, such as Denmead, to economically and culturally kick-start the city. In The Creative Underclass, Denmead critically examines how New Urban Arts and similar organizations can become enmeshed in circumstances where young people, including himself, become visible once the city can leverage their creativity to benefit economic revitalization and gentrification. He points to the creative cultural practices that young people of color from low-income communities use to resist their subjectification as members of an underclass, which, along with redistributive economic policies, can be deployed as an effective means with which to both oppose gentrification and better serve the youth who have become emblematic of urban creativity.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half-Title Page, Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-vi

Table of Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-xii

Introduction

pp. 1-29

1. Troublemaking

pp. 30-44

2. The Hot Mess

pp. 45-75

3. Chillaxing

pp. 76-95

4. Why the Creative Underclass Doesn’t Get Creative-Class Jobs

pp. 96-117

5. Autoethnography of a “Gentrifying Force"

pp. 118-132

6. “Is This Really What White People Do" in the Creative Capital?

pp. 133-154

Conclusion

pp. 155-172

Notes

pp. 173-184

Bibliography

pp. 185-196

Index

pp. 197-204
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