Hell’s Kitchen and the Battle for Urban Space reviewed in New York History
February 20, 2024
Hell's Kitchen's tenements have long captured the attention of reformers, scholars, and the American public. In Hell's Kitchen and the Battle for Urban Space, Joseph J. Varga combines a sophisticated use of critical space theory, with a nuanced investigation of social relations among residents, reformers, and state agencies, to shed light on development in this notorious neighborhood during the Progressive Era's transformative years. Utilizing Henri Lefebvre's understanding of space as "lived, conceived and perceived," Varga reveals that the physical features of the area, social relationships of work and home, reform efforts, ethnic and racial alliances, and government allotment of funds played a role in creating and giving meaning to space on Manhattan's Middle West Side.
