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Nikil Saval, Sarah M. Whiting: Rage in Harlem (2022, Sternberg Press)

"present patterns of confrontation"

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I only recently learned of the work (writing, political leadership, organizing) of Nikil Saval. Ran into this book in a small bookshop and immediately grabbed it after having heard Saval speak at two union-related events in Philly during the last month.

In 1964, in response to police violence in Harlem, June Jordan wrote to Buckminster Fuller to propose a speculative redesign of Harlem. Saval tells that story in a book that is a recreation of a lecture he gave on zoom during Covid restrictions and during his campaign for Pennsylvania Senate (an election he won). It's an interesting story and worth the read.

It's striking to read Jordan's account of what it's like to move through the grid of a city when you feel like you're constantly in the crosshairs:

"Given our goal of a pacific, life-expanding design for human community, we might revise street patterning so that the present patterns of confrontation by parallel lines would never be repeated. The existing monotony limits pleasures of perspectives. rigidly flat land is ruled by rectilinear for. The crisscrosing pattern too often becomes a psychological crucifixion; an emergence from an alleyway into a danger zone vlunerable to enemies approaching in at least two directions that converge at the target who is the pedestrian poised on a corner." (67)

Jordan and Fuller propose large towers (that resemble nuclear cooling towers) that reorient life away from "the street" and is various dangers and toward something more collective and something that would prioritize public safety (safety from, among other things, the police).