"We Wanted to Talk Plumbing": Organizing and Mutual Aid in Baltimore's High-Rise Public Housing

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Abstract

Abstract:Federal and local campaigns to reform "distressed" high-rise public housing in the late twentieth century resulted in the elimination of thousands of public housing units from cities like Baltimore. Those reform campaigns often defined "distress" in cultural terms, imagining Black women residents as imperiled actors, public housing as an impediment to building normative family life, and housing demolition and privatization as a necessary and normalizing corrective. Oral histories with residents living in these disinvested spaces offer counternarratives and demonstrate how Black women residents theorized their own conditions, fashioned material political demands independent of policy makers and housing reformers, and worked to put these demands into practice. This piece reflects on the mutual aid organizing of two former residents of Baltimore's George B. Murphy Homes. Specifically, it analyzes the practical work they did to address the conditions that disinvestment produced, and the intellectual work they did to fashion a materialist vision for housing reform that pushed back against the drive toward demolition and privatization.
“我们想谈谈管道”:巴尔的摩高层公共住房的组织和互助
摘要:20世纪后期,联邦政府和地方政府对“陷入困境”的高层公共住房进行了改革,导致巴尔的摩等城市数千套公共住房被拆除。这些改革运动经常从文化角度定义“痛苦”,把黑人女性居民想象成危险的演员,把公共住房想象成建立规范家庭生活的障碍,把住房拆除和私有化想象成必要的、正常化的纠正措施。居住在这些没有投资的空间里的居民的口述历史提供了相反的叙述,并展示了黑人女性居民如何将自己的条件理论化,塑造独立于政策制定者和住房改革者的物质政治要求,并努力将这些要求付诸实践。这件作品反映了巴尔的摩乔治·b·墨菲之家的两位前居民的互助组织。具体来说,它分析了他们为解决撤资所产生的条件所做的实际工作,以及他们为住房改革塑造的唯物主义愿景所做的智力工作,这些愿景推动了对拆迁和私有化的推动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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