"A masterful work from the late Steven Gregory, Towering Above Harlem stands as a powerful testament to his legacy as a humanist, activist, urban anthropologist, and uncompromising critic. Exemplifying his sharp, anti-racist analysis and intimate ethnographic style, this book offers a keen examination of the intersections of race, class, and power, exposing how institutional elites manufacture inequality. Gregory's work challenges readers to engage critically, resist injustice, and never lose hope." - Arlene Dávila, author of Barrio Dreams: Puerto Ricans, Latinos and the Neoliberal City
"Steven Gregory has gifted us a third, tremendous contribution to a field he unknowingly pioneered: Black Geographies. Towering Above Harlem will tower over that field in perpetuity. It will also provide a forever manual on how—and why--to read the racialized and spatialized cultures of our most powerful institutions. What a legacy!" - Jacqueline Nassy Brown, author of Dropping Anchor, Setting Sail: Geographies of Race in Black Liverpool.
"Steven Gregory has left us with a masterpiece that marshals his genius for ethnographic writing while making a singular contribution to Black geographies, historical anthropology, and urban studies. Towering Above Harlem is at once an unflinching account of how elite institutions enact socio-spatial, racialized, and class-based dispossession, and a clarion call, invigorating the enduring quest for justice for Black and brown communities within and beyond New York City." - Oneka LaBennett, author of Global Guyana: Shaping Race, Gender, and Environment in the Caribbean and Beyond
"Steven Gregory has given us a timely and yet untold story on the coordination and entrenchment of expansive institutional power and its impacts on socially marginalized communities in Manhattan's Upper West Side. Painstakingly researched and rich in theory, Towering above Harlem is critical reading for urban studies scholars and anyone interested in the institutional practices that have been part of New York's political economy." - Karla Slocum, author of Black Towns, Black Futures: The Enduring Allure of a Black Place in the American West