AAG CFP: From the Shining City to New Jack City: Geographies of 1980s America
In his January 1989 farewell address, Ronald Reagan returned once more to John Winthrop’s image of the United States as a shining city on a hill. Reagan described how he had achieved his goal to restore America. And yet the “city streets” Reagan said he would “walk off into” hardly matched the departing President's lofty language. Poverty and homelessness rose dramatically in the 1980s, fueled by Reagan’s austerity politics. Meanwhile, the President spun tales of “welfare queens,” the AIDS crisis was met with overwhelming silence, and a supply of crack cocaine with shadowy Cold War ties ravaged neighborhoods. Many policies and landscapes of the 80s linger as the contemporary terrain on, through, and against which we form new geographical projects.
The narratives and material environments of the 1980s have become part of and are being re-written in our collective memory (or amnesia), as well as set off from (and yet frequently compared to) each new political moment. As such, they are ripe for examination from geographers and historical scholars. As with earlier episodes of urban suffering, many of the most insightful accounts of the era can be found in cultural movements rooted firmly, if diversely, in city spaces, from the explosive allusions and extravagant aspirations of hip-hop to the troubled literary and cinematic satires of life on Wall Street. We seek papers that illuminate culture, economy, and everyday life in 1980s America, and which seek to ground the often-bewildering trends of the decade in geographic terrain. We also welcome papers that explore the relations and parallels between Reagan and Trump’s America.
Possible topics might include:
- Reagan's urbanism, and its opponents
- “Greed is good”: Landscapes of commerce and consumption
- Street knowledge: Geographies of hip-hop
- The second Cold War and apocalyptic cities
- “I want my MTV”: Popular culture, technology, and urban experience
- AIDS, social justice, and the health of cities
- Infrastructures of the 80s (historically or as residual elements of the present)
- Crime, crack, and the demonization of inner cities
- Memory, nostalgia, and the contemporary resonance of the 1980s city
Please send abstracts of 250 words or less by 17 October 2018 to both session organizers:
Clayton Rosati
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Patrick Vitale
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