avocets
Avocets
rss 2.0 subscribe to this page
search


view all
•  projects
•  owners
•  tags

Spain, Daphne. “Race Relations and Residential Segregation in New Orleans: Two Centuries of    Paradox.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 441 (Jan. 1979): 82-96. Sage Publications, Inc. University of Pennsylvania Library, Philadelphia. 7    April 2008. <http://hdl.library.upenn.edu/1017/6965/2>.

In this article, Spain explains the history of New Orleans, and recounts the racial and residential segregation that has always seemed to exist there. Known as “the city that care forgot,” New Orleans was founded by the French in 1718, handed over to the Spanish in 1763, and given back the French in 1800, who then came into conflict with the Native Americans there. All of this laid the foundation for many of the identity crises New Orleans was to experience later on. There were multiple layers of race and ethnicity, with the Spaniards and French constituting the majority of the white population, while slave blacks and free blacks made up the black population. This severe divide in the black community contributed to many of the class distinctions that New Orleans experienced well into the twentieth century. Once the Americans arrived in 1808, yet another group of people was added to the already-tense city, leading to intense apathy toward Americans in general. New Orleans became the biggest supplier of slaves once the importation of slaves was banned, is the place of origin for the phrase “separate but equal,” and heavily exercised Jim Crow laws. Though integration began to emerge in the 1940s due to housing projects, it still remained one of America’s poorest cities.
    Such is the setting for A Streetcar Named Desire. Though New Orleans was filled with “real” people with a strong work ethic and the American dream, it was also a place associated with alcoholism, prostitution, and crime. Thus, it is no surprise that Blanche was so horrified at her sister’s new residence: compared to a Mississippi plantation, New Orleans was completely devoid of physical space, yet social distance was vast. The fact that Stella and Stanley live in the French Quarter, a highly romanticized area, yet still experience such emotional strife further contributes to Williams’ play with New Orleans’ contradictions. Spain notes that New Orleans is known as the “birthplace of jazz,” but is also where “being sold down the river” came about. This internal conflict is the perfect backdrop for the characters of Streetcar, as each struggled with internal conflicts of their own.
 

Quillian,L . "Migration patterns and the growth of high-poverty neighborhoods, 1970-1990" The American journal of sociology [0002-9602] 105.1 (1999). 1-37.
Crowder,K . "Race, Class, and Changing Patterns of Migration between Poor and Nonpoor Neighborhoods" The American journal of sociology [0002-9602] 110.6 (2005). 1715-1763.
Pattillo-McCoy,M . "The limits of out-migration for the black middle class" Journal of urban affairs [0735-2166] 22.3 (2000). 225-241.
Chaudron,C Pattillo,M. "Black middle-class neighborhoods" Annual review of sociology [0360-0572] 31 (2005). 305-329.
Crowder,K . "Wealth, Race, and Inter-Neighborhood Migration" American sociological review [0003-1224] 71.1 (2006). 72-94.
Iceland,J . "Does Socioeconomic Status Matter? Race, Class, and Residential Segregation" Social problems [0037-7791] 53.2 (2006). 248-273.