Home History Acknowledgments
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Acknowledgments

View more publications by Rutgers University Press
Baltimore Revisited
This chapter is in the book Baltimore Revisited
© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Foreword xi
  4. Introduction: Why Revisit Baltimore Now? 1
  5. Part I. Place and Power: Roots of (In)Justice in the City
  6. 1. The City That Eats: Food and Power in Baltimore’s Early Public Markets 13
  7. 2. “Shove Those Black Clouds Away!”: Jim Crow Schools and Jim Crow Neighborhoods in Baltimore before Brown 24
  8. 3. “The Pot”: Criminalizing Black Neighborhoods in Jim Crow Baltimore 37
  9. 4. Vacant Houses and Inequality in Baltimore from the Nineteenth Century to Today 52
  10. 5. A Psychology of Place: Race, Violence, and Community in Baltimore 67
  11. 6. Community Health and Baltimore Apartheid: Revisiting Development, Inequality, and Tax Policy 73
  12. Part II. Histories of Contestation and Activism in a Legacy City
  13. 7. The Riot Environment: Sanitation, Recreation, and Pacification in the Wake of Baltimore’s 1968 Uprising 87
  14. 8. “The People’s Side of the Road”: Movement against Destruction and Organizing across Lines of Race, Class, and Neighborhood 103
  15. 9. More Than a Store: Activist Businesses in Baltimore 118
  16. 10. “Welfare Isn’t a Single Issue”: Baltimore’s Welfare Rights Movement, 1960s–1980s 128
  17. 11. The Last Censors: The Life and Slow Death of Maryland’s Board of Motion Picture Censors, 1916–1981 137
  18. 12. “Temple of the Drama” The Five-Year Protest at Ford’s Theater, 1947–1952 152
  19. Part III. Voices from Here: Listening to the Past
  20. 13. “Because They Were Also Downed People”: Black-Jewish Relationships in Baltimore during the 1968 Uprising and Beyond 163
  21. 14. (snapshot) Korean Communities in Baltimore 178
  22. 15. The Lumbee Community: Revisiting the Reservation of Baltimore’s Fells Point 185
  23. 16. Overburdened Bodies and Lands: Industrial Development and Environmental Injustice in South Baltimore 197
  24. 17. Finding Closure: The Poets of the Sparrows Point Steel Mill 210
  25. 18. Baltimore’s Socialist Feminists—Lessons from Then, Lessons for Now: Community Empowerment and Urban Collectives in the 1970s 216
  26. 19. Relentlessly Gay: A Conversation on LGBTQ Stories in Baltimore 226
  27. Part IV. Surviving in the Neoliberal City: Redevelopment in Baltimore
  28. 20. Johns Hopkins University and the History of Developing East Baltimore 243
  29. 21. Image and Infrastructure: Making Baltimore a Tourist City 257
  30. 22. Skywalk: The Life and Death of Multilevel Urbanism in Downtown Baltimore 271
  31. 23. Rethinking Gentrification in Baltimore, Sharp Leadenhall 286
  32. 24. The Superblock: A Downtown Development Debacle, 2003–2015 293
  33. 25. Under Armour’s Global Headquarters and the Redevelopment of South Baltimore 306
  34. Part V. Democratizing the Archives
  35. 26. Social History in the Archives: Baltimore’s Enduring Legacy 315
  36. 27. Building a More Inclusive History of Baltimore: Preserving the Baltimore Uprising 326
  37. Afterword: Weaving Knowledges 335
  38. Acknowledgments 337
  39. Notes on Contributors 341
  40. Index 349
Downloaded on 10.3.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.36019/9780813594057-031/html
Scroll to top button