Space, Place, and Belonging:
Interdisciplinary Artist Nicole Marroquín
Keywords:
art and letters, interdisciplinary art, urban community, spatial justice , community developmentAbstract
Gentrification is a kind of veiled extension of Manifest Destiny thinking. Anything that is new and comes with more money and is White is better. We’re going to civilize the uncivilized. What was here before, the incredible amount of community building, people tried to make this a better place. And now it’s time for them to go. (Marroquín).
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References
Abel, A. (2018). The Twelve Coolest Neighborhoods in the World. Forbes, June 22.
Marroquín, N. (2018). Youth as Engaged Cultural Workers: Benito Juarez High School and the Legacy of Student Uprisings on the Lower West Side of Chicago. Un-published MS, Department of Art Education, School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Seif, H. (2018) Visualizing Spaces of Empowerment in Chicanx/Mexican Chicago with Artist and Cultural Organizer Diana Solís. In:” Diálogo 21(1): 67-80
Sitios Web:
Betancur, J. with Youngjun K. (2016). The Trajectory and Impact of Ongoing Gen-trification in
Marroquín, N. (2012). A Day Without Public Art in Pilsen. AREA Chicago. Available in http://www.areachicago.org/a-day-without-public-art-in-pilsen/
Pilsen. Chicago: Natalie P. Vorhees Center. Available in https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/992726_c04d492b373541cdbbec88c1223d1245.pdf
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