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City of Fortune: Inequality and the Making of Contemporary New York [Kõva köide]

(Williams College)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 400 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 8 pages of illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: WW Norton & Co
  • ISBN-10: 0393292851
  • ISBN-13: 9780393292855
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 400 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 8 pages of illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: WW Norton & Co
  • ISBN-10: 0393292851
  • ISBN-13: 9780393292855
Teised raamatud teemal:
Postwar New York City famously expired in a 1970s tableau of burning Bronx tenements, subway graffiti, crushing debt, and the tabloid headline Ford to City: Drop Dead. From its ashes the city reemerged to reach new heights, whether in stock averages or the gleaming pencil towers punctuating Midtown. But at ground level the citys basic institutions were cracking. The city was rebuilt on a foundation of deep inequality.



This elegant history traces the making of contemporary New York over the half-century from the fiscal crisis of the 1970s to the Covid pandemic. The focus is on city life in three of its key dimensions: housing, schooling, and policing. With finance and real estate driving the citys growth, each of these areas became more exclusive, less democratic. Affordable housing grew scarce, with the homeless population surging and working New Yorkers paying rents well above the 30 percent standard of affordability. Underfunded public schools were crowded out by better-resourced charter schools and academies, magnet schools, and gifted-and-talented programs. Policing was the most volatile flashpoint over this fifty-year period. Mayor Rudy Giulianis Broken Windows strategy of attacking crime by cracking down on minor offenses escalated into Michael Bloombergs stop-and-frisk policy, which targeted young Blacks and Latinos and yielded relatively few arrests. The citys deepening inequality was heavily racialized, one of many connections between this New York story and those of cities across the country.



The rich cast of characters ranges from mayors, governors, and headline public figures like Al Sharpton, to behind-the-scenes reformers like the progressive educator Deborah Meier, to the everyday New Yorkers who organized to support rent guidelines or local control of the schools. It is in a widespread civic engagement that the citys progressive traditions continue to thrive.

Arvustused

"For readers interested in understanding why contemporary New York City is so stratified and hierarchical, City of Fortune is essential. Researched with exceptional precision and grace, and beautifully written, the book offers not only a history of New York?Mason B. Williams tells the story of the remaking of the entire United States in the late twentieth century. This is a remarkable accomplishment." -- Kim Phillips-Fein, author of Fear City "In City of Fortune, Mason B. Williams revisits and revises the political history of New York City since the 1970s by directing our attention to the ways in which a persistent deprivation affects every New Yorker?rich, middle class, and poor." -- David Nasaw, author of The Wounded Generation "Across every page of City of Fortune rages a battle for the soul of contemporary New York City. Mason B. Williams offers an urgent and unsparing portrait of a metropolis that failed to learn the lessons of its 1970s collapse, and instead traded one crisis for another." -- Bench Ansfield, author of Born in Flames "Anyone who wants to understand what has happened to New York City over the last fifty years must read City of Fortune, a vivid, penetrating, and richly textured account of the political battles that shaped the citys schools, housing, and policing." -- Elizabeth Blackmar, coauthor of The Park and the People "A lucid and penetrating analysis of the interwoven forces that transformed policy approaches to the inequalities of New York City." -- John Mollenkopf, author of A Phoenix in the Ashes

Mason B. Williams is the author of City of Ambition: FDR, LaGuardia, and the Making of Modern New York, an Editors Choice of the New York Times Book Review. He teaches at Williams College.