Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Gentrification and the decline of African American arts and culture in Washington, D.C.
View through CrossRef
The purpose of this this thesis is to investigate and examine the effects of gentrification on the African American arts and culture scene in the city of Washington, D.C. This study seeks to prove that the effects of gentrification contributed heavily to the displacement of the city's Black population, while simultaneously contributing to the decline of African-American arts and culture in the city, and disturbing the lives and careers of the African-American artists who call Washington, D.C. home. The study discusses gentrification in the general sense, and moves on to discuss gentrification in the city of Washington, D.C. specifically. The thesis covers the various ways in which gentrification has contributed to the removal and attempted eradication of various examples of African American arts and culture in the city, primarily in its visual arts and music sectors, while questioning the authenticity of other attempts to preserve culture that, in many ways, seems appropriated. The thesis also discusses the notion that there are fewer available resources and funding opportunities for artists of color in Washington, D.C., while examining recent demographic changes in the city, primarily in areas that once held a Black majority that are now populated heavily by White residents. The thesis concludes with the idea that gentrification does, in many ways, contribute to the decline of African American culture in the city. A way to combat gentrification is to recognize and include the already established community as part of the revitalization process to ensure that the community does not feel deprived.
Title: Gentrification and the decline of African American arts and culture in Washington, D.C.
Description:
The purpose of this this thesis is to investigate and examine the effects of gentrification on the African American arts and culture scene in the city of Washington, D.
C.
This study seeks to prove that the effects of gentrification contributed heavily to the displacement of the city's Black population, while simultaneously contributing to the decline of African-American arts and culture in the city, and disturbing the lives and careers of the African-American artists who call Washington, D.
C.
home.
The study discusses gentrification in the general sense, and moves on to discuss gentrification in the city of Washington, D.
C.
specifically.
The thesis covers the various ways in which gentrification has contributed to the removal and attempted eradication of various examples of African American arts and culture in the city, primarily in its visual arts and music sectors, while questioning the authenticity of other attempts to preserve culture that, in many ways, seems appropriated.
The thesis also discusses the notion that there are fewer available resources and funding opportunities for artists of color in Washington, D.
C.
, while examining recent demographic changes in the city, primarily in areas that once held a Black majority that are now populated heavily by White residents.
The thesis concludes with the idea that gentrification does, in many ways, contribute to the decline of African American culture in the city.
A way to combat gentrification is to recognize and include the already established community as part of the revitalization process to ensure that the community does not feel deprived.
Related Results
Food and Gentrification
Food and Gentrification
Gentrification is a process of neighborhood change. The term gentrification was coined by Ruth Glass in 1964, when she described how formerly working-class London neighborhoods wer...
Measurable Progress? Teaching Artsworkers to Assess and Articulate the Impact of Their Work
Measurable Progress? Teaching Artsworkers to Assess and Articulate the Impact of Their Work
The National Cultural Policy Discussion Paper—drafted to assist the Australian Government in developing the first national Cultural Policy since Creative Nation nearly two decades ...
Black Wax(ing): On Gil Scott-Heron and the Walking Interlude
Black Wax(ing): On Gil Scott-Heron and the Walking Interlude
The film opens in an unidentified wax museum. The camera pans from right to left, zooming in on key Black historical figures who have been memorialized in wax. W.E.B. Du Bois, Mari...
Gentrification
Gentrification
Over the last two decades research on gentrification has boomed. As major cities across the United States experience seismic shifts in luxury real estate, inequality, lack of affor...
Gentrification in Latin America
Gentrification in Latin America
Gentrification has generated heated debates since Ruth Glass introduced the term to the academic world in 1964 to describe the process of residential succession and displacement of...
Exploring the Dynamics of Urban Gentrification: A Human Geographical Perspective
Exploring the Dynamics of Urban Gentrification: A Human Geographical Perspective
Urban gentrification, a process of neighborhood transformation driven by complex interplays of socioeconomic forces, policy interventions, and cultural shifts, has become a promi...
Theorizing Gentrification as a Process of Racial Capitalism
Theorizing Gentrification as a Process of Racial Capitalism
Academics largely define gentrification based on changes in the class demographics of neighborhood residents from predominately low-income to middle-class. This ignores that gentri...
Capturing Gentrification: The Roles of Charles Marville and Eugène Atget in Capturing the Transformation of Paris in the Nineteenth Century
Capturing Gentrification: The Roles of Charles Marville and Eugène Atget in Capturing the Transformation of Paris in the Nineteenth Century
Between 1853 and 1914, Paris (France), ‘the city of art’, underwent enormous changes due to the urban development plans of Baron Georges Haussmann. Although gentrification was coin...

