ABSTRACT
Gentrification is extensively discussed in the media, where coverage can describe changing neighbourhoods and analyse the causes and consequences of such change. The media are also arenas in which the voices of those who advocate or resist gentrification can be heard. How can this profusion of content be examined? What methods can be used to critically address the role of the media in constructing and propagating discourses on gentrification? Central to this book is the idea that new research should engage with the theoretical and methodological issues that emerge when media products are used as a corpus to study gentrification.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part 1|47 pages
Comparing and Contrasting Discourses on Gentrification
part 2|50 pages
Place-Making Through Evolving Narratives
chapter 6|22 pages
Shaping and Diverting Public Space Regulation: Newspaper Coverage of an Eviction in a Business Improvement District, Washington, DC
part 3|76 pages
Fuelling and Orchestrating Gentrification
chapter 8|21 pages
The Eviction of Ethnicity and Class in the Media Coverage of Commercial Gentrification in the 18 Arrondissement of Paris
chapter 9|22 pages
Constructing the Authenticity of Gentrified Districts? Newspaper Coverage of Belleville (Paris) and El Raval (Barcelona)
chapter 10|24 pages
Acknowledging the Interplay Between Religion and Gentrification in the Press? “Muslim Enclaves” in Goutte D'Or (Paris) and El Raval (Barcelona)
part 4|90 pages
Voicing Alternative Narratives and Resisting Gentrification
