The City after Property

Abandonment and Repair in Postindustrial Detroit

In The City after Property, Sara Safransky examines how postindustrial decline generates new forms of urban land politics. In the 2010s, Detroit government officials classified a staggering 150,000 lots—more than a third of the city—as “vacant” or “abandoned.” Analyzing subsequent efforts to shrink the Motor City’s footprint and budget, Safransky presents a new way of conceptualizing urban abandonment. She challenges popular myths that cast Detroit as empty along with narratives that reduce its historical decline to capital and white flight. In connecting contemporary debates over neoliberal urbanism to Cold War histories and the lasting political legacies of global movements for decolonization and Black liberation, she foregrounds how the making of—and challenges to—modern property regimes have shaped urban policy and politics. Drawing on critical geographical theory and community-based ethnography, Safransky shows how private property functions as a racialized construct, an ideology, and a moral force that shapes selves and worlds. By thinking the city “after property,” Safransky illuminates alternative ways of imagining and organizing urban life.

Published by Duke University Press.

Royalties from book sales are donated to the Transforming Power Fund of Detroit, which you can read more about here.

“By asking ‘What comes after property?’ Sara Safransky opens up a captivating and incisive mix of political economy and urban geography to think with and against dominant discourses on Detroit’s decline. The result is a refreshing take on the entanglements of property, race, and urban politics that adeptly weaves ethnographic and archival research with political theory and global struggles for freedom into a rich analysis that makes The City after Property essential reading for scholars of racial capitalism and urban change.” Kate Derickson, Associate Professor of Geography, University of Minnesota

“Sara Safransky’s fresh perspective on issues of land and property provides urban theorists and practitioners with a sophisticated and engaging argument for the way property is structured as well as the peril and promise of thinking of what comes after property. Theoretically imaginative and lyrically written, this outstanding book offers a timely and important contribution to the fields of urban studies, American studies, geography, ethnic studies, and anthropology.” — Rebecca Jo Kinney, author of Beautiful Wasteland: The Rise of Detroit as America’s Postindustrial Frontier


Praise