TY - BOOK ID - 4858345 TI - Gentrification : a working-class perspective PY - 2014 SN - 9781472418500 9781315584348 9781317129295 9781317129301 9781138546622 PB - Farnham, Surrey, UK ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate, DB - UniCat KW - Social classes KW - Gentrification KW - Working class KW - Neighborhoods KW - Group identity KW - Classes sociales KW - Embourgeoisement (Urbanisme) KW - Travailleurs KW - Quartiers (Urbanisme) KW - Identité collective KW - #SBIB:316.334.5U13 KW - 316.343.63 KW - Sociologie van stad en platteland: sociale aspecten van de ruimte, sociale ecologie KW - Arbeidersstand. Proletariaat. Landarbeiders --(sociale stratificatie) KW - 316.343.63 Arbeidersstand. Proletariaat. Landarbeiders --(sociale stratificatie) KW - Identité collective UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:4858345 AB - Focusing on the working-class experience of gentrification, this book re-examines the enduring relationship between class and the urban. Class is so clearly articulated in the urban, from the housing crisis to the London Riots to the evocation of housing estates as the emblem of 'Broken Britain'. Gentrification is often presented to a moral and market antidote to such urban ills: deeply institutionalised as regeneration and targeted at areas which have suffered from disinvestment or are defined by 'lack'. Gentrification is no longer a peripheral neighbourhood process: it is policy; it is widespread; it is everyday. Yet comparative to this depth and breadth, we know little about what it is like to live with gentrification at the everyday level. Sociological studies have focused on lifestyles of the middle classes and the working-class experience is either omitted or they are assumed to be victims. Hitherto, this is all that has been offered. This book engages with these issues and reconnects class and the urban through an ethnographically detailed analysis of a neighbourhood undergoing gentrification which historicises class formation, critiques policy processes and offers a new sociological insight into gentrification from the perspective of working-class residents. This ethnography of everyday working-class neighbourhood life in the UK serves to challenge denigrated depictions which are used to justify the use of gentrification-based restructuring. By exploring the relationship between urban processes and working-class communities via gentrification, it reveals the 'hidden rewards' as well as the 'hidden injuries' of class in post-industrial neighbourhoods. In doing so, it provides a comprehensive 'sociology of gentrification', revealing not only how gentrification leads to the displacement of the working class in physical terms but how it is actively used within urban policy to culturally displace the working-class subject and traditional ways of life in an attempt to create the neoliberal subject. It reveals the novel forms of displacement this causes and develops an original typology of displacement from this. The book also demonstrates that gentrification is not always a zero-sum game for working-class residents, who at times rework gentrification processes, on their own terms for their own gains. ER -