Abstract

ABSTRACT Since 2014, the city of Detroit has undertaken a massive program of water shutoffs targeting households behind in their water bills. In this article, I ask how, given the level of hardship to such a high proportion of city residents, the health hazards, and in the face of international condemnation, were public officials able to narrate the water shutoffs as necessary, and indeed as a public good? The study finds that as supposedly race-neutral statements by public officials in favor of the shutoffs cast them in terms of individual irresponsibility, informal comments to news articles restated these same ideas in explicitly anti-Black terms. Commenters’ elaboration makes explicit the ways in which the water shutoffs have relied on a widespread sense of Black Detroiters as undeserving of even the most basic means of dignified life – access to potable water.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call