Skip to main content
Skip to main content

"Housing the Black Body: Value, Domestic Space, and Segregation Narratives.”

ResearchPaper

LGBTQ Studies
African American/African Diaspora

EnglishGerShun Avilez Linking mobility and housing, the article connects two issues to the rights and privileges of citizenship in a democracy.Hansberry takes on residential segregation by confronting that practice not merely as a restriction on domestic space but mainly as a constriction of civic identity. The case intimates that, given the centrality of segregation to restrictive practices affecting citizenship, the relationship of African Americans to places of residence and to domestic space in general is indicative of their relationship to legal structures. The social and legal developments that directly and indirectly encouraged segregated housing during the mid-twentieth century created the conditions for African Americans to feel estranged from their domestic spaces. (1) The feelings of frustration and dissatisfaction with the "kitchenette" expressed in Gwendolyn Brooks's poem define the housing problems to come for many African American communities, and such sentiments factor into representations of domestic space in mid-20th-century African American narratives."Housing the Black …Faculty63136Johns Hopkins University Press