Nicholas L. Caverly is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Description
"Nick Caverly has written a book for these mean times. Demolishing Detroit provides a history of the theory and practice of development by destruction. But, even more than that, it suggests and substantiates a notion of the ways that racism has been built so insistently into the material fabric of our everyday lives that it frames and determines the results of even the best-intentioned efforts of address it." --Walter Johnson, author of The Broken Heart of America: St. Louis and the Violent History of the United States "Nick Caverly has written an intellectually provocative, original, and refreshing examination of Detroit. He skillfully foregrounds the stories and experiences of Detroit residents and demolition workers to provide an unexpected and nuanced view on how racism, labor, and urban redevelopment operate in contemporary American cities. Caverly's ethnographic sensitivity combined with his attentiveness to the relationship between structural racism and the built environment is not only innovative, but sorely needed in the present moment." --Andrew Newman, co-editor of A People's Atlas of Detroit

