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'Joyful Cities' project aims to make public spaces more welcoming for people of color

 

Sociology Assistant Professor Teresa Gonzales standing under an arch of flowers
Sociology Asst. Prof. Teresa Gonzales has won Ford Foundation support for her "Joyful Cities" research in Lawrence and other gateway cities in Massachusetts.

 Asst. Prof.  grew up in Chicago鈥檚 Pilsen neighborhood, a predominantly Mexican American area on the city鈥檚 Lower West Side.

When gentrification began pushing out Pilsen鈥檚 lower-income residents and changing the neighborhood鈥檚 complexion, Gonzales wanted to understand the forces behind that 鈥 and what community activists and residents could do about it. 

As a sociology Ph.D. candidate at the University of California Berkeley, she did extensive ethnographic research on community development efforts in two Chicago neighborhoods: Little Village, a Mexican American community near Pilsen, and Greater Englewood, a predominantly Black area on the South Side.

鈥淚 spent two-and-a-half years conducting interviews to understand development in that city,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here was a weird thread that kept emerging: Community activists and residents said they wanted to create spaces of joy so they can be outside, feel safe and have fun.鈥

They also wanted to change the dominant narrative: that their neighborhoods were locations of poverty and violence in need of rescue through redevelopment 鈥 and that anywhere young people of color gathered, it meant trouble, she says.

A mural celebrating the arts on the side of a former mill building that now houses the Essex Art Center, the Acting Out! Theatre Co. and Spicket River Brewery.
A mural celebrating the arts on the side of a former mill building that now houses the Essex Art Center, the Acting Out! Theatre Co. and Spicket River Brewery.

Her book on that research,  was published last fall by New York University Press. 

Now, thanks to a Ford Foundation fellowship, Gonzales is turning her ethnographic lens on how residents of predominantly Latino 鈥済ateway鈥 cities in Massachusetts use public spaces, especially outdoor spaces like parks, for leisure. And she鈥檚 involving undergraduate students in her research.

鈥淭he goal is to partner with the city, get residents involved and ultimately get people outside and enjoying themselves,鈥 she says, with a focus on making public spaces more welcoming for Black and Latino residents.

She鈥檚 starting her 鈥淛oyful Cities鈥 research in Lawrence, which is about 80% Hispanic. She hopes to expand it over the next few years to Chelsea, Holyoke and Lynn. 

鈥淚鈥檓 looking at the various ways Black and brown communities engage in leisure and public forms of playfulness as a way of building community and social cohesion, and how they reclaim public spaces for celebration,鈥 she says.

Global Studies student Najifa Tanjeem, facing camera, and honors psychology and sociology major Debby Fernand, right, observe at the Essex Art Center's L.I.V.E. block party.
Global Studies student Najifa Tanjeem, facing camera, and honors psychology and sociology major Debby Fernand, right, observe at the Essex Art Center's L.I.V.E. block party.

The Ford Foundation fellowship for pre-tenured faculty is affording Gonzales a year鈥檚 sabbatical for focused research, while a university seed grant is paying for several students to assist her. She also taught a small class in ethnographic field research methods last fall. Several students in the class helped with Gonzales鈥 research in Lawrence, while two partnered on a preliminary study of Chelsea.

, an  student who graduated in December with a double major in sociology and  and a minor in , worked for Gonzales as a research assistant over summer 2021 and then took her class in the fall.

Fernand observed Lawrence鈥檚 public parks and described the amenities they offered, how well they were maintained and who was using them on different days and at various times. Then she learned how to code those observations. 

Fernand, who鈥檚 now studying for a master鈥檚 degree in applied sociology at UMass Boston, says she appreciated the chance to get such extensive research experience 鈥 and was interested to find that while men felt comfortable playing and relaxing in the parks, women did not. 

Men playing at the domino tables in Campagnone Park in Lawrence, Massachusetts.
Men playing at the domino tables in Campagnone Park in Lawrence, Massachusetts.

鈥淲e saw men of color playing dominoes, baseball and basketball in the parks, and women just passing through and not really using these spaces,鈥 she says.

Senior sociology major Rosmery Medrano, a Dominican American student who grew up in Lawrence and took Gonzales鈥 class in the fall, says she found it eye-opening to analyze her own city and culture from the multiple perspectives of gender, race and culture.

The domino tables in one corner of Lawrence鈥檚 Campagnone Park were always busy with men playing and watching the games, she says. If women were there, they were watching their children or waiting on the men in their families, she says. 

鈥淭hey were mostly hanging out at the shaved ice stand and going up to the men and asking, 鈥楧o you want this? Do you want some coffee?鈥 One time, I actually saw a woman with a household broom sweeping the park,鈥 Medrano says. 鈥淚n my culture, if you鈥檙e a woman and you鈥檙e not doing anything, if you鈥檙e not actively cleaning or cooking or taking care of a kid, they鈥檒l automatically categorize you as lazy.鈥

Najifa Tanjeem, a Ph.D. student from Bangladesh who's in the , spent 150 hours observing in nine different parks in Lawrence and at nine community events last summer as a research assistant for Gonzales. She hopes to resume this summer, when the project will move into the next stage: conducting detailed interviews with residents, community activists and other stakeholders. 

Tanjeem, who doesn鈥檛 understand Spanish, says the most important thing she鈥檚 learned so far was how to check her own biases while making field observations 鈥 for example, by not making assumptions when people raised their voices.

鈥淢aybe they could be happy, or friendly, or excited to see each other,鈥 she says. 鈥淛ust because their voices were loud doesn鈥檛 mean they were angry.鈥