Between Ocean and City: The Transformation of Rockaway, New York (Columbia History of Urban Life) (Paperback)

Between Ocean and City: The Transformation of Rockaway, New York (Columbia History of Urban Life) By Lawrence Kaplan, Carol Kaplan Cover Image

Between Ocean and City: The Transformation of Rockaway, New York (Columbia History of Urban Life) (Paperback)

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Rockaway Beach was once a popular seaside resort in south Queens with a small permanent population. Shortly after World War II, large parts of this narrow peninsula between the ocean and the bay became some of New York City's worst slums. A historian who grew up in the community and his wife, a social worker, together present an illuminating account of this transformation, exploring issues of race, class, and social policy and offering a significant revision of the larger story of New York City's development. In particular, the authors qualify some of the negative assessments of Robert Moses, suggesting that the "Power Broker" attempted for many positive initiatives for Rockaway.

Based on extensive archival research and hundreds of hours of interviews with residents, urban specialists, and government officials past and present, Between Ocean and City is a clear-eyed and harrowing story of this largely African American community's struggles and resiliency in the face of grinding poverty, urban renewal schemes gone wrong, and a forced ghettoization by the sea.
Lawrence Kaplan, who has taught British and American history at the City College of New York, spent his formative years in Rockaway. Carol P. Kaplan is a practicing social worker and an associate professor at Fordham University Graduate School of Social Service.
Product Details ISBN: 9780231128490
ISBN-10: 0231128495
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: April 16th, 2003
Pages: 264
Language: English
Series: Columbia History of Urban Life