Los Angeles's Indoor Swap Meet Boom and the Emergence of a Multiethnic Retailscape

Pub Date : 2021-10-13 DOI:10.5749/buildland.28.2.0025
Alec R. Stewart
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Abstract

abstract:Indoor swap meets proliferated within metropolitan Los Angeles's rapidly diversifying inner suburbs throughout the 1980s and 1990s, transforming onetime retail and industrial buildings into multitenant vendor markets. Relying on architectural and programmatic theming to attract Latinx shoppers, many swap meet managers built market environments that resembled Mexican mercados and tianguis. While some urbanists have interpreted these markets as sites of "Latino Urbanism," their Korean ownership, large cohorts of Asian vendors and Black shoppers, and ties to Asian banking and garment industries complicate these narratives. Tracing the origins of this Korean-dominated business niche through case studies in Koreatown, Lynwood, South Los Angeles, and Anaheim, this article illustrates how shoppers and vendors used swap meets' non-White social environments to negotiate class and social differences. Rather than essentializing these market environments as "Latinx" spaces, this article argues that swap meets are better understood as fertile sites of material and social exchange across ethnic and class lines.
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洛杉矶室内旧货交换市场的繁荣和多民族零售景观的出现
在20世纪80年代和90年代,室内交换会在洛杉矶大都市快速多样化的内郊区激增,将曾经的零售和工业建筑转变为多租户的供应商市场。依靠建筑和程序化的主题来吸引拉丁购物者,许多旧货市场的管理者建立了类似于墨西哥mercados和tianguis的市场环境。虽然一些城市学家将这些市场解释为“拉丁城市主义”的场所,但它们的韩国所有者、大量的亚洲供应商和黑人购物者,以及与亚洲银行业和服装业的联系,使这些叙述变得复杂。本文通过对韩国城、林伍德、南洛杉矶和阿纳海姆的案例研究,追溯了韩国人主导的商业利基的起源,说明了购物者和供应商如何利用旧货交换会上的非白人社会环境来协商阶级和社会差异。本文认为,与其将这些市场环境本质化为“拉丁”空间,不如将交换会议理解为跨越种族和阶级界限的物质和社会交换的肥沃场所。
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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