COVID-19 in Brooklyn: Everyday Life During a Pandemic

·
· Taylor & Francis
Ebook
196
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

COVID-19 in Brooklyn: Everyday Life During a Pandemic looks closely at the ways that the COVID-19 pandemic impacted the lives of ordinary people living in the super-gentrified Brooklyn neighborhoods of Park Slope and Greenpoint/Williamsburg, where the authors hunkered down during the 2020 lockdown.

Putting their private lives into broader scientific and public contexts, Krase and DeSena discuss a wide range of research methods and theories, as well as print and internet media sources about the pandemic. With words and images, the scholar-activist authors place their own personal experiences and those of their family and neighbors inside the broader context of global and national medical emergencies, as well as related economic, social, and political unrest, such as widespread unemployment, the Black Lives Matter Movement, and the contentious 2020 presidential election. Using a distributive social justice perspective and examining their own privileges, they discover and discuss the racial and economic inequities that affected the lives of other Brooklynites. These disparities included public health measures and lack of access to basic necessities of urban living. The book also addresses the cultural and economic shifts that took place at the start of the pandemic and contemplate how those forces will impact on future urban life, asking what the "new normal" of business, entertainment, education, housing, and work will look like locally and globally.

This richly illustrated book offers an invaluable local study of the impact of the pandemic on ordinary people in Brooklyn. As such, it will be of great interest to students and researchers in the humanities and social sciences.

About the author

Jerome Krase is Murray Koppelman Professor and Emeritus Professor of Sociology at Brooklyn College, the City University of New York, USA. He is an activist-scholar regarding urban community issues and has served on many of New York City’s community organizations. His research explores issues of gentrification, urban life, culture, class, ethnicity, and race with a particular focus on New York City, and he lectures, photographs, and writes on urban life and culture globally. The co-editor of the journal Urbanities, he has authored Self and Community in the City (1982) and Seeing Cities Change: Local Culture and Class (2012), and co-authored or co-edited Ethnicity and Machine Politics (1991), Race and Ethnicity in New York City (2005), Race, Class, and Gentrification in Brooklyn: A View from the Street (2016), and Gentrification around the World (two volumes, 2020).

Judith N. DeSena is Professor of Sociology at St. John’s University, New York City, USA. Her work centers on the study of neighborhoods and the analysis of race, class, and gender within them. Her latest research investigates how gentrification affects community relationships in Brooklyn, New York. She has also published articles exploring residential segregation, women’s community activism, and gendered space. She is author of People Power: Grass Roots Politics and Race Relations (1999), Protecting One's Turf: Social Strategies for Maintaining Urban Neighborhoods (second edition, 2005), and Gentrification and Inequality in Brooklyn: The New Kids on the Block (2009), and co-author of Race, Class, and Gentrification in Brooklyn: A View from the Street (2016). She is also editor of Gender in an Urban World (2008) and co-editor of The World in Brooklyn (2012) and Gentrification around the World (two volumes, 2020).

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