Industry Reviews
"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
"With lucid storytelling, flowing prose, and rich historical contextualization of a city that has been, contradictorily, both ignored and over-analyzed, Sara Safransky has produced a text that is a must-read." -- Rachel Brahinsky * Urban Geography *
"In The City after Property, Safransky masterfully weaves rich stories, her own experiences doing field research, and data together to show the devastating impact of planning decisions in the City of Detroit. . . . The City after Property teaches us to trust Black and Brown people as they lead the way in stewarding land, defining collective ownership, and redesigning cities - after property." -- tamika l. butler * Urban Geography *
"A magisterial work of urban geography. The book is a fluid and remarkable conversation between the concrete and the abstract, between the empirical and the theoretical, between the streets of Detroit and debates in the critical social sciences. Abstractions such as racial capitalism, property regimes, and sustainability fixes, among others, are grounded through thick description and rich ethnographic detail, drawn from interviews and archives." -- Nathan McClintock * Urban Geography *
"The City After Property... is a thoughtful, powerful, and respectful examination of Detroit, its history and people, and the everyday land and property struggles embedded in the reimagining of a city. Safransky shines a light on well-worn popular narratives of Detroit's recent history, including debates ranging from vacancy and evictions to utopian visions of postindustrial agrarian urbanism, to expose the complexities, challenges, and lived realities of modern-day Detroit." -- Rachel Barber & Maxwell Hartt * Journal of Urban Affairs *
"In the academic literature, a well-crafted book is more than words on paper; it becomes a guiding light, illuminating solutions to specific challenges and opening new avenues of thought. The City After Property does no less: it offers a comprehensive exploration of land and property issues in Detroit, providing valuable insights into the city's urban planning and development landscape in the early 2010s." -- Micaela Mancini * Dialogues in Urban Research *
"The City after Property is at once an intimate ethnography of the city, a geographic critique of racial capitalism, and a celebration of the visionary work of Detroiters fighting to remain in the city in the context of massive displacement. One of the feats of this book is the fluid narration of the structural to the intimate. This means that as it describes the roots of tax policy it always returns to the lived experience of it, the human, the intimate, loss and grief. The result is Safransky's own refusal, over and over, to reduce the forces of dispossession in Detroit to abstraction." -- Jessi Quizar * Antipode *