Sara Martucci is a Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York.
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Description
"In a short time, Williamsburg went from being a neighborhood to avoid to a globally renowned brand for upscale bohemianism. It helped signal Brooklyn as a "cool" place for investment. In this new lively new book, Sara Martucci reminds us that even a hyper gentrified neighborhood still has more social class and ethnoracial diversity than meets the eye. With the idea that groups experience the same spaces through their own distinct "neighborhood attachment styles," she has given us a novel way of understanding how different people come to make sense of where they live. Most importantly, these styles shape social action and help explain everyday tensions that emerge from gentrification. Martucci's work will resonate with any reader who studies or lives in places undergoing massive change." * Richard Ocejo, author of Masters of Craft: Old Jobs in the New Urban Economy and Upscaling Downtown: From Bowery Saloons to Cocktail Bars in New York City * "Martucci carries the baton forward in her study of gentrifying Brooklyn. Her focus on "attachment styles" captures the cross-cutting use values of residents in a rapidly changing neighborhood. There Was Nothing There shows how people can be in the same space, but not of the same place of mind." * Jason Patch, co-author of Gentrifier *