Gente or Gentre?: Complicating urban development in the 21st century
In response to Javier's first question, and to Avila's closing summations at the end of the book, I find it helpful to think creatively about how communities that are not white and affluent engage in development. Keeping in mind the holistic reparative project accomplished by The Folklore of the Freeway, our class should be wary in applying dichotomous ideas to urban planning and look instead at the elasticity of these actions. In particular, I find the phenomenon of gentefication, where wealthier second and third generation Mexicans Americans are going back to their parents' neighborhoods and buying up old property. (most notably in the Boyle Heights region discussed in Avila's book) A riff on the term "gentrification," it nonetheless draws striking parallels between what Chicanos did with the freeways in the 1970s and 80s. This gentefication is indeed motivated by a sense of historical preservation and cultural patrimony, but also tensions between different generations and class backgrounds. We can envision this process as the next step in the processes delineated by Avila. It necessarily takes into consideration the spaces created by the freeway and claims to ownership by the people moving in and out of them. I encourage our class discussion to move past the binarism of white-non-white urban development to better consider the complexities within a given community/ethnic/political space.
For further reading on gentefication, check out these articles from the NY Times, Southern California Public Radio, and LA Magazine.
For further reading on gentefication, check out these articles from the NY Times, Southern California Public Radio, and LA Magazine.
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Freeway Battles From Both Sides of the Coin by Javier Cienfuegos (19 November 2014)
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