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Tenement tales: The fashioning of 97 Orchard Street

机译:廉价公寓故事:乌节街97号的兴起

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摘要

The Lower East Side Tenement Museum, a popular New York tourist destination, intimately reflects its famed immigrant neighborhood's history in tours of 97 Orchard Street's reconstructed ethnic household apartments. Its landmarked tenement building's immigrant spaces are interpreted to provide a visitor experience designed to invoke the Lower East Side's ethnic enclaves. The immigrant past recreated at its historic tenement creates a picture of multi-ethnicity in service of a diverse U.S. immigrant present. One overall message is that for today's newcomers as well as those of the past, hardship precedes multi-generational success.;Tracing these reconstructions in the light of the Museum's archives affords insight into its active reconstruction of the past. The Museum's interpretations oscillate among different scales of representation (building, neighborhood, and nation), while working at different registers to harness Jewish collective memory of a place once known as the Great New York Ghetto. I ask how the Museum's uses of history in representing an ethnic immigrant urban past connect it to the present, including to its contemporaneous neighborhood, and vice versa. One way I do so is by examining how its building's interpretive schemes and initial residential stories simultaneously failed to give full voice to a fuller range of the neighborhood's groups (historic and post-1935) even as they undercut its earlier Jewish specificity of place.;An overt use of history raises larger interdisciplinary debates about migration, memory, historicity and heritage, the urban built environment, and immigrant acculturation in space as well as time. In this case study, I trace a spatial politics of memory by asking how and where do the Museum's stories of local "historic" ethnic and living communities get told? The acquisition of a tenement building affected the Museum's choice of which groups to represent, since it chose an interpretative strategy that emphasized the affective personal stories of past building residents. Subsequent real estate conflicts with Fujianese neighborhood residents spilled into questions of representation, showing how an activist museum found it hard to cordon off a local immigrant present from a historic past re-created in place expressly for visitors. The question of whose story gets told in 97 Orchard's privileged residential spaces has again shifted as a post-9/11 Lower East Side hollows out into a place of memory, with hyper-gentrification accompanying Downtown's shift into an entertainment hub.;Lastly, I ask how the Museum's discursive and material practices change and persist in the course of acquiring and interpreting a tenement building to tell a history of American immigration. More broadly, this thesis uses 97 Orchard Street as a prism to trace and interrogate how history is produced, displayed, received and interpreted spatially through a Lower East Side immigrant building whose tours provide a material window into discursive practices of place. Interpretive layers expose how narratives accrete and get reused, making them harder to later dislodge. Following de Certeau, it documents how associated narratives of 97 Orchard Street eventually become seen as inevitable and "stick to place" in a building whose commodified tours of past Lower East Side ethnicity re-inscribe collective memories today. I trace here how a common poor tenement building was transformed into an American national landmark (thus touching on the role of the state in promoting museums, heritage and citizenship), as a new site of memory at a time when gentrification permits the tenement to be newly presented as precious and authentic.
机译:下东城经济公寓博物馆是纽约著名的旅游胜地,在参观乌节街97号重建的民族家庭公寓时,可以亲切反映其着名的移民社区的历史。它具有地标性的唐楼建筑的移民空间经过诠释,旨在为游客带来体验,以唤起下东城的民族飞地。在其历史建筑中重建的移民过去创造了服务于多样化的美国移民现在的多民族形象。一个总体信息是,对于如今的新人和过去的新人来说,艰苦的经历先于几代人的成功。;根据博物馆的档案资料对这些重建进行追踪,可以洞悉其过去的积极重建。博物馆的解释在不同的代表比例(建筑物,邻里和国家)之间摇摆,同时在不同的登记处进行工作,以利用犹太人对一个曾被称为大纽约犹太区的地方的集体记忆。我想问一下博物馆在代表一个城市移民的过去历史中所使用的历史如何将其与现在(包括其当代社区)联系起来,反之亦然。我这样做的一种方法是,检查建筑物的解释方案和最初的住宅故事如何同时使整个社区(历史悠久和1935年以后)的群体无法充分表达自己的意见,即使他们削弱了犹太人早期的居住地特色。对历史的公开使用引起了关于迁移,记忆,历史性和遗产,城市建筑环境以及空间和时间的移民适应的跨学科争论。在本案例研究中,我通过询问博物馆有关当地“历史”民族和居住社区的故事如何以及在何处讲述来追溯记忆的空间政治?购置一幢廉价公寓影响了博物馆选择代表哪个团体的选择,因为它选择了一种解释策略,着重强调过往建筑居民的个人情感故事。随后与福建居民的房地产冲突引发了代表问题,这表明一个激进主义博物馆如何很难根据为游客重新创建的历史悠久历史来封锁当地的移民。在Orchard的97个特权住宅空间中讲述了谁的故事的问题,随着9/11后下东区的空旷进入了记忆的地方,伴随着Downtown转变为娱乐中心的同时,超高级化也成为了一个问题。询问博物馆的话语和物质习惯是如何变化的,并在获取和解释物业大楼以讲述美国移民历史的过程中持续存在。更广泛地讲,本论文以乌节街97号为棱镜,通过下东城移民大楼追踪和审问历史如何在空间上产生,显示,接收和解释,其行程提供了探究场所话语实践的重要窗口。解释层揭示了叙事如何积累和重新使用,使它们以后更难以移开。继de Certeau之后,它记录了乌节街97号的相关叙述如何最终被视为不可避免的,并“固定放置”在一栋建筑物中,该建筑物的过去的下东区种族的旅行化变现了今天的集体记忆。我在这里追溯了一个普通的贫民窟房屋如何转变成美国的国家地标(从而触及了国家在促进博物馆,文化遗产和公民权方面的作用),作为高档化时期允许人们回购房屋的新地点。新近呈现的珍贵而真实。

著录项

  • 作者

    Sampson, Elissa J.;

  • 作者单位

    The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.;

  • 授予单位 The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.;
  • 学科 Geography.;Ethnic studies.;Judaic studies.;Museum studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2015
  • 页码 339 p.
  • 总页数 339
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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