Urban Castles
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Product Description
In the first comprehensive investigation of the role of landlords in shaping the urban landscapes of today, Jared Day explores the unique case of New York City from the close of the nineteenth century through the World War II era. During this period, tenement landlords were responsible for designing and shaping America´s urban landscapes, building housing for the city´s ever-growing industrial workforce. Fueled by the illusion of easy money, entrepreneurs managed their buildings in ways that punished compassion and rewarded neglect -and created some of the most haunting images of urban squalor in American history.
Urban Castles mines a previously uninvestigated body of tenant and landlord newspapers, journals, and real estate records to understand how tenement landlords operated in an era before tenant rights developed into a central issue for urban reformers. Day contends that -perhaps more than any other group of property owners -urban landlords stood upon the very fault lines of class, ethnicity, and race. In contrast to many urban histories set in executive boardrooms and state houses, and which chronicle struggles between large corporations, government officials, and organized labor, this fascinating work deals with the more chaotic world of small-scale entrepreneurs and their frequently antagonistic relationships with their customers -working-class tenants.
Urban Castles is a richly informative chronicle of the dark underbelly of America´s emerging welfare state. The neglected side of this important story covered by Day´s research says much about the sea changes in landlord-tenant relations and urban policy today.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #443147 in Books
- Published on: 1999-09-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 315 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
Tenements and tenement life are more often evoked than studied. This book provides a key entry, through a rich examination of landlords, their policies and their interactions. Based on extensive documentation and a real desire to figure out how tenements functioned, Jared Days study really opens new understanding of urban life and urban issues in the turn-of-the-century decades. The contribution to the study of ethnicity alone is eye-catching. -- Peter Stearns, editor
Wide-ranging and perceptive. -- Review
Review
"A well-documented, workmanlike study with a good selection of period photographs. Its major theme, the perpetual low-income housing crisis in Manhattan and landlords' loss of authority, opens up new directions for the study of urban life." -- Elaine S. Abelson, The Journal of American History
" Urban Castles should be read for its methodological contributions to uncovering the politics of everyday market relations and for its conceptual contribution to understanding how social relations are historically depoliticized. It is a rich and suggestive study that helps explain a major transformation in the social relations of twentieth-century American cities." -- Journal of Social History
"[A] worthy study of a neglected area of city building and urban policy. It takes a refreshing look at an obscure, maligned element in New York City's history and restores its voice. Jared Day deserves praise for this courageous reclamation." -- Joel Schwartz, Business History Review
"In Urban Castles, Jared N. Day sheds new light upon the familiar subject of New York City's early twentieth-century tenement districts.... by providing a detailed examination of an important, but previously neglected group -- tenement landlords." -- Jason McDonald, Ethnic and Racial Studies
"Part ethnography, part "dream and thought" analysis.... Urban Castles remains a worthy study of a neglected area of city building and urban policy. It takes a refreshing look at an obscure, maligned element in New York City's history and restores its voice. Jared Day deserves praise for this courageous reclamation." -- Joel Schwartz, Business History Review
"Wide-ranging and perceptive." -- Journal of American Studies
Review
"It is engrossing reading for anyone interested in the history of New York City." -- Justice Emily Jane Goodman, New York State Supreme Court
