The Black Side of the River: Race, Language, and Belonging in Washington, DC

The Black Side of the River: Race, Language, and Belonging in Washington, DC

by Jessica A. Grieser
The Black Side of the River: Race, Language, and Belonging in Washington, DC

The Black Side of the River: Race, Language, and Belonging in Washington, DC

by Jessica A. Grieser

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Overview

In The Black Side of the River, sociolinguist Jessi Grieser draws on ten years of interviews with dozens of residents of Anacostia–a historically Black neighborhood in Washington, DC–to explore the impact of urban change on Black culture, identity, and language. Grieser’s work is a call to center Black lived experiences in urban research.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781647121525
Publisher: Georgetown University Press
Publication date: 02/01/2022
Pages: 242
Sales rank: 677,010
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jessi Grieser is an assistant professor of rhetoric, writing, and linguistics at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She is a sociolinguist who specializes in discourse analysis, geosemiotics, and sociophonetics.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

Introduction: “I Expected the Streets to Be Paved with Gold”: Anacostia and Washington, DC, in the Black Imagination

1. Racializing Gentrification through Discourse

2. Repositioning Anacostia: Circulating Insider Discourses to Counteract Outsider Views

3. “They Ain’t Make Improvements for Us”: Place-Making with African American Language

4. Race, Geography, and Agency East of the River

Conclusion: Bridging the River

References

Index

About the Author

Illustrations

Figures

1. Map of the District of Columbia and Surrounding Counties

2. “Black alone” Population, District of Columbia, 2000 and 2010 Censuses

Tables

1. AAL Morphosyntactic Features

2. Density Measure by Topic

3. Chi-Square Residuals

What People are Saying About This

John R. Rickford

Grieser’s The Black Side of the River is one of the most thoroughly socio-linguistic books I’ve seen. The perspectives of community members are generously represented, and the author’s theorizing about social factors is unusually rich. This book may well establish place identity, and its intersections with race and class, as the most promising perspective from which to understand sociolinguistic variation in many communities. I can think of several to which it would very well apply.

John Baugh

Jessica Grieser weaves a vivid intersectional tapestry of language and life among residents in DC's Anacostia neighborhood, drawing upon historical evidence, extensive interviews, and a keen sense of place in sociological and geographic terms where rivers frame literal and metaphorical dividing lines in a city built by slaves that is now occupied by their proud descendants.

Anne H. Charity Hudley

The Black Side of the River presents a much-needed Black-centered approach to linguistic discourses about race and place. The book deftly illustrates the impact of gentrification on identity and language. Grieser expands our knowledge about the linguistic expression of gentrification and introduces a fresh perspective on the sociolinguistic concept of displacement as expressed through linguistic style.

Ben Zimmer

In The Black Side of the River, Jessi Grieser combines careful sociolinguistic analysis with impressive argumentation about the nature of race and place in urban America, all conveyed in a vivid, accessible style. The book is bursting at the seams with telling details from the linguistic practices of Black residents in Washington, DC's Anacostia neighborhood, creating a richly rendered portrait of lived experiences in a rapidly shifting cityscape.

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