Colored Property
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David M. P. Freund
About this book
Author / Editor information
David M. P. Freund is associate professor of history at the University of Maryland, College Park.
Reviews
“David Freund appears to have ransacked the National Archives and has uncovered a treasure trove of documents that tell an incredible story as they detail behaviors, rationales, and values on the eve of the civil rights revolution. Ultimately, he shows that the American housing market was not simply exploited by racial interests; it was born of—and set up to serve—them.”
“Colored Property is a sophisticated analysis of the political construction of race. In this provocative examination of federal homeownership and finance programs, Freund shows how government intervention in the housing market reinforced racial differences but masked the consequences in the rhetoric of free choice. Richly detailed and rigorous, Colored Property gives the lie to the myth of colorblindness.”
“If we think of the study of race, residence, and urban policy as having been transformed long ago by Arnold Hirsch’s studies of the ‘second ghetto’ in Chicago, and more recently by Thomas Sugrue’s work on Detroit, Colored Property marks a third remaking of this critically important area of inquiry. Freund’s profound work insistently pursues the stories of white city-leavers into the suburbs and so fully links national trends with rich local examples.”
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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CHAPTER ONE. The New Politics of Race and Property
1 - PART ONE. The Political Economy of Suburban Development and the Race of Economic Value, 1910–1970
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CHAPTER TWO. Local Control and the Rights of Property: The Politics of Incorporation, Zoning, and Race before 1940
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CHAPTER THREE. Financing Suburban Growth: Federal Policy and the Birth of a Racialized Market for Homes, 1930–1940
99 -
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CHAPTER FOUR. Putting Private Capital Back to Work: The Logic of Federal Intervention, 1930–1940
140 -
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CHAPTER FIVE. A Free Market for Housing: Policy, Growth, and Exclusion in Suburbia, 1940–1970
176 - PART TWO. Race and Development in Metropolitan Detroit, 1940–1970
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CHAPTER SIX. Defending and Defi ning the New Neighborhood: The Politics of Exclusion in Royal Oak, 1940–1955
243 -
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CHAPTER SEVEN. Saying Race Out Loud: The Politics of Exclusion in Dearborn, 1940–1955
284 -
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CHAPTER EIGHT. The National Is Local: Race and Development in an Era of Civil Rights Protest, 1955–1964
328 -
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CHAPTER NINE. Colored Property and White Backlash
382 -
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ABBREVIATIONS
401 -
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NOTES
405 -
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INDEX
489