By Amy Maria Kenyon
Paper - 9780814332283
Price: $26.95s
Subjects: Africana Studies: History and Biographies, Regional Studies: Detroit
Series: African American Life Series
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Published by Wayne State University Press
Amy Maria Kenyon spent her childhood in suburban Detroit. Formerly a lecturer in cultural history, she is now a freelance author and researcher working in both the United Kingdom and the Netherlands.
“Kenyon’s most valuable contribution is the insertion of cultural history into what has been primarily a structural analysis of urban decline. [Dreaming Suburbia’s] strength lies in Kenyon’s careful reading of films, novels, and television shows that produced and reflected multiple narratives of postwar suburbanization. Urban historians interested in writing a fuller history of postwar American would do well to be more attentive to these cultural manifestations of suburban life.”
— American Historical Review
"The framework device is ingenious and Kenyon makes some significant points. Her complex insight that the early post-war American suburb turned its back not only on the inner city and upon Blacks but also upon the past carries the ring of truth and it gains resonance from her suggestion that suburbia became central to a national identity. Then, too, her use of the term detachment, in place of segregation or separation, adds meaning: it conveys the irony not only of retrospective accounts such as her own, but also of contemporaries, including those who experienced suburban estrangement. Dreaming Suburbia effectively presents some of the major themes in the way that post-war American suburbs have been represented."
— Urban Studies
“Dreaming Suburbia is always interesting. It deepens our understanding of the challenges endured by those left behind in the postwar cities while revealing the conformity that enveloped those who opted to leave. The suburbs carried the weight of postwar prosperity and national identity, burdens that the book amply documents.”
— Robert Beauregard, Milano Graduate School of Management and Urban Policy, New School University