Baltimore was once a vibrant manufacturing town, but today, with
factory closings and steady job loss since the 1970s, it is home to
some of the most impoverished neighborhoods in America. "The Hero's
Fight" provides an intimate look at the effects of
deindustrialization on the lives of Baltimore's urban poor, and
sheds critical light on the unintended consequences of welfare
policy on our most vulnerable communities.
Drawing on her own uniquely immersive brand of fieldwork,
conducted over the course of a decade in the neighborhoods of West
Baltimore, Patricia Fernandez-Kelly tells the stories of people
like D. B. Wilson, Big Floyd, Towanda, and others whom the American
welfare state treats with a mixture of contempt and pity--what
Fernandez-Kelly calls "ambivalent benevolence." She shows how
growing up poor in the richest nation in the world involves daily
interactions with agents of the state, an experience that differs
significantly from that of more affluent populations. While
ordinary Americans are treated as citizens and consumers, deprived
and racially segregated populations are seen as objects of
surveillance, containment, and punishment. Fernandez-Kelly provides
new insights into such topics as globalization and its effects on
industrial decline and employment, the changing meanings of
masculinity and femininity among the poor, social and cultural
capital in poor neighborhoods, and the unique roles played by
religion and entrepreneurship in destitute communities.
Blending compelling portraits with in-depth scholarly analysis,
"The Hero's Fight" explores how the welfare state contributes to
the perpetuation of urban poverty in America."
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