Gentrification as Interruption: Listening to the Everyday Disruption of Black Life
- Date
2021-03-01
- Main contributor
Allie Martin
- Summary
-
Like cities around the globe, Washington, DC has been gentrifying for decades. As a result, the city’s overall population has soared while the Black population has decreased from its peak Chocolate City status in the 1970s. These processes of gentrification are often studied longitudinally, where we see neighborhoods shift in racial demographics, socioeconomic status, and cultural formation over a given period of time. In this talk, I use a digital sound studies approach to recast gentrification as interruption, as jagged disruptions to everyday Black life in DC. These ruptures are a crucial part of the city’s gentrification story, and yet are often overlooked in favor of a more reductive narrative of displacement. Using music and soundscape analysis, I consider gentrification as the sonic disruption of Black life: through sirens, the displacement of music scenes, and the criminalization of sound. These stories, drawn from DC’s rapidly gentrifying Shaw neighborhood, are intended to broaden conversations about gentrification and help us to listen against everyday sonic harms.
- Subjects
Gentrification; Sound recordings; Digital humanities
- Location
District of Columbia
- Collection
IDAH Speaker Series
- Unit
Institute for Digital Arts and Humanities
- Language
English
- Related Item
Presentation Slides
- Notes
Part of the Institute for Digital Arts & Humanities' Ambient Algorhythms in the Arts and Humanities speaker series.
Access Restrictions
This item is accessible by: the public.