EBOOK

Central City's Joy and Pain

Solidarity, Survival, and Soul in a Birmingham Housing Project

Jerome E. Morris
(0)

About

With Central City's Joy and Pain, Jerome E. Morris explores complex social issues through personal narrative. He does so by blending social-science research with his own memoir of life in Birmingham, Alabama. As someone who lived in the Central City housing project for two transitional decades (1968–91) and whose family continued to reside there until 1999, when the city razed the community, the author provides us with the often unexplored bottom-up perspective on Black public-housing residents' experiences.

As Morris's experiential and authoritative narrative voice unfolds in the pages of Central City's Joy and Pain, both the scholarly and lay reader are brought on a journey of what life is like for people who live and die at the intersection of race and poverty in a rapidly evolving southern urban center. The setting of a historic public-housing community provides a rich canvas on which to paint a world through the author's personal experience of growing up there-and his later observations as a researcher and academic.

Through its syncopation of personal stories and scholarly research, Central City's Joy and Pain captures what it means to be Black, poor, and full of dreams. In this setting, dreams are realized by some and swallowed up for others in the larger historical, social, economic, and political context of African Americans' experiences during and after the civil rights movement.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"Jerome E. Morris's voice is at once beautiful and inspiring, one from the scholar-activist tradition of Black America. This work powerfully illustrates how Black People-even as we have been consigned to and ghettoized in indecent 'public housing'-found ways to survive oppressive, systemic racism and poverty-and, in the case of Dr. Morris, even carve out a pathway to a decent life. Central City's
Elaine Brown
"Morris provides readers with a powerful historical and personal journey through Central City that is captivating reading. He does a phenomenal job of not only highlighting the depths of structural racism and the accumulation of disadvantage but also of documenting the sheer will, determination, strength, and resolve of a people to survive and thrive. Central City's Joy and Pain is a page turner t
Tyrone C. Howard
"Central City's Joy and Pain is not just a story about events that took place several decades ago but is also well connected to the systems that remain in place for the perpetuation of Black oppression. Jerome E. Morris has done a great job of sharing his experiences with the broader community, and readers-in not only Birmingham and the South, but well beyond-will be enriched by the experiences an
Charles Connerly, professor emeritus of urban and regional planning, University of Iowa

Artists