1. Arts promotion and Black urban displacement: Exploring the paradox of the positive in government public relations and urban renewal discourse.
- Author
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Waymer, Damion and Hill, Theon E.
- Subjects
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URBAN renewal , *CITY dwellers , *PUBLIC relations , *BLACK art , *BLACK people , *URBAN tourism , *PUBLIC relations firms - Abstract
For decades, scholars in the United States have lamented public policies and government actions that seem to affect, intentionally or unintentionally, already marginalized Black populations. Urban renewal policies and initiatives are examples of government actions that receive such criticism. Arts promotion as a strategic public relations tactic, used to attract middle- to -upper class residents and visitors to cities, is one communicative approach cities take to sell their attractiveness and viability. Yet, cities, urban renewal, and urban tourism research has not received much attention from Public Relations researchers. Critical public relations scholars, however, can help to expose key issues such as displacement and marginalization of Black citizens that are associated with city public relations activities such as promotional culture, arts/city marketing, and urban tourism. Using racial neoliberalism as a theoretical, analytical framework, we examine urban renewal in Cincinnati, Ohio USA, to demonstrate the power of boosterish, government-sponsored urban renewal efforts and the ways such paradoxically positive discourse makes it difficult for the often Black, inner-city communities to challenge advancement that might marginalize them further. • Uses Paradox of the Positive to interrogate arts promotion and urban renewal discourse. • Identifies arts promotion as form of government public relations in urban contexts. • Examines Cincinnati, Ohio USA's urban renewal discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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