What can local histories of interracial conflict and collaboration
teach us about the potential for urban equity and social justice in
the future? Courtney Elizabeth Knapp chronicles the politics of
gentrification and culture-based development in Chattanooga,
Tennessee, by tracing the roots of racism, spatial segregation, and
mainstream "cosmopolitanism" back to the earliest encounters
between the Cherokee, African Americans, and white settlers. For
more than three centuries, Chattanooga has been a site for
multiracial interaction and community building; yet today public
leaders have simultaneously restricted and appropriated many
contributions of working-class communities of color within the
city, exacerbating inequality and distrust between neighbors and
public officials. Knapp suggests that "diasporic
placemaking"—defined as the everyday practices through which
uprooted people create new communities of security and
belonging—is a useful analytical frame for understanding how
multiracial interactions drive planning and urban development in
diverse cities over time. By weaving together archival,
ethnographic, and participatory action research techniques, she
reveals the political complexities of a city characterized by
centuries of ordinary resistance to racial segregation and uneven
geographic development.