The Spatial Configuration of Segregation, Elite Fears of Disease, and Housing Reform in Washington, D.C.’s Inhabited Alleys

IF 0.5 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Carolyn B. Swope
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Abstract

In the early 1900s, Washington, D.C. contained many alleys in the interior of blocks inhabited by impoverished Black residents. Elite reformers engaged in an aggressive campaign to eliminate alleys, on the grounds of their purported unsanitary environment and high disease prevalence. In this paper, I combine quantitative, qualitative, and spatial sources to explore new perspectives on segregation, public health, and the racialized efforts of housing reformers during this period. I find that reformers overstated the horrors of conditions in alleys and their effects on residents’ health: poorer health among alley residents was in large part due to Black residents’ marginalization wherever they might live. Alleys’ status as racialized space, coupled with progressive paternalistic racism, facilitated the discursive construction of alleys as pathological “breeding grounds of disease.” Further, my findings shed new light on micro-configurations of segregation within racially mixed neighborhoods, as well as the social experience and meaning of such configurations. Far from indicating harmonious coexistence, the proximity of such alleys to white homes and institutions spurred elite Washingtonians’ self-interested fear of disease spreading beyond the alleys. Thus, this pattern of segregation helps explain the zeal of the campaign to eradicate alleys: as a means of achieving separation from undesired Black neighbors whom white reformers associated with contagion.
隔离的空间结构,精英对疾病的恐惧,以及华盛顿特区居民区的住房改革
20世纪初,华盛顿特区贫困黑人居民居住的街区内部有许多小巷。精英改革者以所谓的不卫生环境和高疾病流行率为由,发起了一场积极的运动,以消除小巷。在这篇论文中,我结合了数量、质量和空间来源,探索了对隔离、公共卫生和这一时期住房改革者种族化努力的新视角。我发现改革者夸大了小巷条件的恐怖及其对居民健康的影响:小巷居民的健康状况较差在很大程度上是由于黑人居民无论生活在哪里都被边缘化。小巷作为种族化空间的地位,加上进步的家长式种族主义,促进了将小巷作为病态的“疾病滋生地”的随意构建。此外,我的发现为种族混合社区中种族隔离的微观结构,以及这种结构的社会经验和意义提供了新的线索。这些小巷与白人家庭和机构的距离远未表明和谐共处,这引发了华盛顿精英对疾病在小巷之外传播的自私恐惧。因此,这种隔离模式有助于解释根除小巷运动的热情:这是一种与不受欢迎的黑人邻居分离的手段,白人改革者将其与传染病联系在一起。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: Social Science History seeks to advance the study of the past by publishing research that appeals to the journal"s interdisciplinary readership of historians, sociologists, economists, political scientists, anthropologists, and geographers. The journal invites articles that blend empirical research with theoretical work, undertake comparisons across time and space, or contribute to the development of quantitative and qualitative methods of analysis. Online access to the current issue and all back issues of Social Science History is available to print subscribers through a combination of HighWire Press, Project Muse, and JSTOR via a single user name or password that can be accessed from any location (regardless of institutional affiliation).
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