edited by Howard Bossen and John P. Beck photographs by Gilles Perrin with Nicole Ewenczyk
Michigan State University Press, 2014 Cloth: 978-1-61186-130-3 | eISBN: 978-1-60917-675-4 Library of Congress Classification F574.D453A266 2014 Dewey Decimal Classification 977.434
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Detroit is frequently viewed as a city where hope has been lost, government is totally dysfunctional, and the infrastructure is beyond repair. For far too many people around the world, the Motor City is perceived as a city whose greatness is in distant memory. Detroit Resurgent, while not ignoring the problems facing the city, explores Detroit in a new way that reveals a culturally rich, very alive, and undeniably present side of the city. Through photographic portraits, interviews, essays, and poetry, it demonstrates the vitality and humanity of Detroit’s people, providing a powerful counternarrative to the vision of Detroit as a Rust Belt wasteland. Giving voice to people with hopes for a brighter future and aspirations to create a new city out of the old required recording their own words and engaging a portrait photographer grounded in humanism whose approach is based upon the traditions of social documentary photography. Detroit Resurgent explores the city through the voices of those working in a multitude of ways to reshape it into a twenty-first-century urban space, through the auto industry, urban agriculture and food production, entrepreneurial action and small business, visual and performing arts, activism, and visionary leadership.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Howard Bossen is Professor of Photography and Visual Communication in the School of Journalism at Michigan State University and Adjunct Curator of Photography at the Michigan State University Museum.
John P. Beck is an Associate Professor in the School of Human Resources and Labor Relations at Michigan State University.
REVIEWS
Start with the photos. Sixty-two wonderful portraits of an eclectic range of Detroiters—artists, journalists, politicians, museum directors—all pictured in the city where they work, live, or play. Then talk about the stories. Everyone profiled tells a different slice of the city’s story, a time of great conflict between hope and desperation. If you’re looking for a representative cross-section of who’s here right now, and what they’re doing to make this city work, you won’t find a better example than Detroit Resurgent. --Stephen Henderson, Editorial Page Editor, Detroit Free Press
Detroit was the most innovative city of the 20th century. Detroit Resurgent shows it may be the most innovative city of the 21st, as well. A cast of farmers, activists, industrialists, academics, artists, laborers, preachers, and politicians share how they’re filling Detroit’s empty spaces with new ideas for urban living. --Edward McClelland, author of Nothin’ but Blue Skies: The Heyday, Hard Times, and Hopes of America’s Industrial Heartland
Detroit Resurgent wisely combines many forms—photographs, interviews, scholarly essays, a personal essay, and a poem for good measure—to tell Detroit’s complex, ever-changing story. Everyone involved in this compelling, ambitious project seems to agree on one thing: it’s about the people. Open this book. Meet these people. --Jim Ray Daniels, author of Birth Marks and Trigger Man: More Tales of the Motor City
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Foreword, by Lou Anna K. Simon
Preface
A Poem Saved My Life: An Homage to Detroit, by jessica Care moore
Detroit Resurgent, by John P. Beck
Journey to Detroit: A Global Photographic Odyssey, by Howard Bossen
Portraits of the Motor City, photographs by Gilles Perrin and interviews by Nicole Ewenczyk
Detroit Dreams: No Rust Belt Scene, by Larry Gabriel
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
edited by Howard Bossen and John P. Beck photographs by Gilles Perrin with Nicole Ewenczyk
Michigan State University Press, 2014 Cloth: 978-1-61186-130-3 eISBN: 978-1-60917-675-4
Detroit is frequently viewed as a city where hope has been lost, government is totally dysfunctional, and the infrastructure is beyond repair. For far too many people around the world, the Motor City is perceived as a city whose greatness is in distant memory. Detroit Resurgent, while not ignoring the problems facing the city, explores Detroit in a new way that reveals a culturally rich, very alive, and undeniably present side of the city. Through photographic portraits, interviews, essays, and poetry, it demonstrates the vitality and humanity of Detroit’s people, providing a powerful counternarrative to the vision of Detroit as a Rust Belt wasteland. Giving voice to people with hopes for a brighter future and aspirations to create a new city out of the old required recording their own words and engaging a portrait photographer grounded in humanism whose approach is based upon the traditions of social documentary photography. Detroit Resurgent explores the city through the voices of those working in a multitude of ways to reshape it into a twenty-first-century urban space, through the auto industry, urban agriculture and food production, entrepreneurial action and small business, visual and performing arts, activism, and visionary leadership.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Howard Bossen is Professor of Photography and Visual Communication in the School of Journalism at Michigan State University and Adjunct Curator of Photography at the Michigan State University Museum.
John P. Beck is an Associate Professor in the School of Human Resources and Labor Relations at Michigan State University.
REVIEWS
Start with the photos. Sixty-two wonderful portraits of an eclectic range of Detroiters—artists, journalists, politicians, museum directors—all pictured in the city where they work, live, or play. Then talk about the stories. Everyone profiled tells a different slice of the city’s story, a time of great conflict between hope and desperation. If you’re looking for a representative cross-section of who’s here right now, and what they’re doing to make this city work, you won’t find a better example than Detroit Resurgent. --Stephen Henderson, Editorial Page Editor, Detroit Free Press
Detroit was the most innovative city of the 20th century. Detroit Resurgent shows it may be the most innovative city of the 21st, as well. A cast of farmers, activists, industrialists, academics, artists, laborers, preachers, and politicians share how they’re filling Detroit’s empty spaces with new ideas for urban living. --Edward McClelland, author of Nothin’ but Blue Skies: The Heyday, Hard Times, and Hopes of America’s Industrial Heartland
Detroit Resurgent wisely combines many forms—photographs, interviews, scholarly essays, a personal essay, and a poem for good measure—to tell Detroit’s complex, ever-changing story. Everyone involved in this compelling, ambitious project seems to agree on one thing: it’s about the people. Open this book. Meet these people. --Jim Ray Daniels, author of Birth Marks and Trigger Man: More Tales of the Motor City
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Foreword, by Lou Anna K. Simon
Preface
A Poem Saved My Life: An Homage to Detroit, by jessica Care moore
Detroit Resurgent, by John P. Beck
Journey to Detroit: A Global Photographic Odyssey, by Howard Bossen
Portraits of the Motor City, photographs by Gilles Perrin and interviews by Nicole Ewenczyk
Detroit Dreams: No Rust Belt Scene, by Larry Gabriel
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE