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Affluent Seattle has one of the highest numbers of unhoused people
in the United States. In 2021 an estimated 40,800 people
experienced homelessness in Seattle and King County during the
year, not counting the significant number of "hidden" homeless
people doubled up with friends or living in and out of cheap
hotels. In Skid Road Josephine Ensign uncovers the stories of
overlooked and long-silenced people who have lived on the margins
of society throughout Seattle's history. How, Ensign asks, has a
large, socially progressive city like Seattle responded to the
health and social needs of people marginalized by poverty, mental
illness, addiction, racial/ethnic/sexual identities, and
homelessness? Through extensive historical research, Ensign pieces
together the lives and deaths of those not included in official
histories of the city. Drawing on interviews, she also shares a
diversity of voices within contemporary health and social care and
public policy debates. Ensign explores the tensions between
caregiving and oppression, as well as charity and solidarity, that
polarize perspectives on homelessness throughout the country.
A compelling look at the historical roots of poverty and
homelessness, the "worthy" and "unworthy" poor, and the role of
charity health care and public policy in the United States. Home to
over 730,000 people, with close to four million people living in
the metropolitan area, Seattle has the third-highest homeless
population in the United States. In 2018, an estimated 8,600
homeless people lived in the city, a figure that does not include
the significant number of "hidden" homeless people doubled up with
friends or living in and out of cheap hotels. In Skid Road,
Josephine Ensign digs through layers of Seattle history-past its
leaders and prominent citizens, respectable or not-to reveal the
stories of overlooked and long-silenced people who live on the
margins of society. The sometimes fragmentary tales of these
people, their lives and deaths, are not included in official
histories of a place. How, Ensign asks, has a large, socially
progressive city like Seattle responded to the health needs of
people marginalized by poverty, mental illness, addiction,
racial/ethnic/sexual identities, and homelessness? Drawing on
interviews and extensive research, Ensign shares a diversity of
voices within contemporary health care and public policy debates.
Informed by her own lived experience of homelessness, as well as
over three decades of work as a family nurse practitioner providing
primary health care to homeless people, Ensign is uniquely situated
to explore the tensions between caregiving and oppression, as well
as charity and solidarity, that polarize perspectives on
homelessness throughout the country. A timely story in light of the
ongoing health care reform debate, the affordable housing crisis,
and the COVID-19 pandemic, the stories from Skid Road illuminate
issues surrounding poverty and homelessness throughout America.
At the beginning of the homelessness epidemic in the 1980s,
Josephine Ensign was a young, white, Southern, Christian wife,
mother, and nurse running a new medical clinic for the homeless in
the heart of the South. Through her work and intense relationships
with patients and co-workers, her worldview was shattered, and
after losing her job, family, and house, she became homeless
herself. She reconstructed her life with altered views on
homelessness-and on the health care system. In Catching
Homelessness, Ensign reflects on how this work has changed her and
how her work has changed through the experience of being
homeless-providing a piercing look at the homelessness industry,
nursing, and our country's health care safety net.
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