Month: January 2020

[Article] Wilson Sherwin – The Radical Feminist Legacy of the National Welfare Rights Organization

Wilson Sherwin (Alum, 2019)

Published an article co-authored with Professor Frances Fox Piven

The Radical Feminist Legacy of the National Welfare Rights Organization.” WSQ: Women’s Studies Quarterly. 2019. 47(3), 135-153. 

Abstract

Relying on archival and firsthand accounts, we argue that existing scholarship on the welfare rights movement has silenced many of the more radical feminist tendencies and accorded undue emphasis to the way recipient activists conformed to hegemonic, patriarchal standards. By exploring recipient activists’ rejection of waged work, anti-war politics, and their fight for reproductive justice, we demonstrate how a social movement of primarily poor Black women forged sophisticated arguments for the importance of guaranteed income as a means of facilitating autonomy and civic engagement, rather than reifying gendered social roles.

[Article] Sara Martucci – Shopping Streets and Neighborhood Identity: Retail Theming as Symbolic Ownership in New York

Sara Martucci (Alum, 2018)

Published an article titled “Shopping Streets and Neighborhood Identity: Retail Theming as Symbolic Ownership in New York.City and Community. December, 2019 (online version)

Abstract

As the economies of production and trade have dwindled in Western cities, urban locales have had to capitalize on other opportunities for growth. Middle and upper class consumers are now sought after resources for cities and neighborhoods once supported by manufacturing. This article considers the role of local retail actors in shifting neighborhood identity towards luxury consumption. Important in this transformation is the process of theming by which business owners rely on cues from the neighborhood’s identity and institutions, incorporate these cues into decisions for their own businesses, and thereby reify or change neighborhood identity. By tracing changes on shopping streets in Williamsburg, Brooklyn and Manhattan’s Lower East Side, I show how retail theming interacts with neighborhood identity. Interviews with storeowners and archival retail data illuminate how choices made by entrepreneurs or coporations contribute to dramatic aesthetic changes on the street. As the neighborhood identities change, existing long‐term residents and less wealthy visitors become excluded from the local shopping streets and lose ownership over neighborhoods.