Project Heat and Sensory Politics
Project Heat and Sensory Politics
Chapter Three examines how transitioning Horner residents coped with the loss of the abundant and free heat that had once circulated through their homes. As they sought to replicate "project heat," they exposed themselves and their families to serious physical and financial risks.
Keywords: public housing, race, class, materiality, Chicago, Publics, Welfare, Sympathy, Citizenship, urban planning
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