Placeless

Homelessness in the New Gilded Age

Patrick Markee (Author) ... more
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Edition: US - Hardback
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Product Info
English
352 pages 15.77 x 23.57 x 2.97 cm
Approx. weight: 0.57 kg
Publication date: 02 Dec,2025
Barcode/ ISBN: 9781685891671 Melville House

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By: Patrick Markee     
In the tradition of Matthew Desmond's Evicted, a longtime housing activist presents a vivid and myth-breaking account of why homelessness endures in contemporary America...

Millions of people are affected by homelessness, but media pundits and politicians see homelessness as a social work problem, or a matter of personal pathology, or some peculiar subspecies of urban poverty.

Informed by the author’s own front-line experiences from more than two decades working as an advocate for homeless people in New York City and his work with housing activists across the country. Placeless: Homelessness in the New Gilded Age presents an alternative and innovative, wide-angle view of homelessness and displacement in New York and elsewhere.

A tour of the geography of homelessness in New York City, where some 100,000 people a night sleep in the city’s shelter system, Markee visits certain city landmarks where homeless New Yorkers struggle to survive:

  • armories once built to quarter militias who put down worker uprisings
  • a train tunnel underneath Riverside Park
  • a grim intake center where infants, children, and families were forced to sleep on office floors
  • a former psychiatric wing of Bellevue Hospital now sheltering hundreds of homeless men each night
  • a Manhattan park surrounded by luxury condos where the police routinely harassed homeless street-dwellers

Blending historical analysis, urban theory, and the latest policy research, Markee considers homelessness in America as a tragic yet inevitable consequence of economic shifts inaugurated in the Reagan era, worsening inequality and housing affordability, systemic racism, and neoliberal government policies.

At a moment where tabloids and politicians use homelessness as an excuse to whip up fear, Placeless is a powerful and moving account of a social problem whose solution is entirely possible.

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