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Cooperatives in New Orleans

Collective Action and Urban Development

Anne Gessler

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University Press of Mississippi img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte

Beschreibung

Cooperatives have been central to the development of New Orleans. Anne Gessler asserts that local cooperatives have reshaped its built environment by changing where people interact and with whom, helping them collapse social hierarchies and envision new political systems.

Gessler tracks many neighborhood cooperatives, spanning from the 1890s to the present, whose alliances with union, consumer, and social justice activists animated successive generations of regional networks and stimulated urban growth in New Orleans.

Studying alternative forms of social organization within the city’s multiple integrated spaces, women, people of color, and laborers blended neighborhood-based African, Caribbean, and European communal activism with international cooperative principles to democratize exploitative systems of consumption, production, and exchange. From utopian socialist workers’ unions and Rochdale grocery stores to black liberationist theater collectives and community gardens, these cooperative entities integrated marginalized residents into democratic governance while equally distributing profits among members.

Besides economic development, neighborhood cooperatives participated in heady debates over urban land use, applying egalitarian cooperative principles to modernize New Orleans’s crumbling infrastructure, monopolistic food distribution systems, and spotty welfare programs. As Gessler indicates, cooperative activists deployed street-level subsistence tactics to mobilize continual waves of ordinary people seizing control over mainstream economic and political institutions.

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Schlagwörter

Colored Domestic Union, history, Black Panther Party, war, mutual aid, Freret, Ida Weis Friend, activism, Laboringmen’s Protective Association, Eugene Bacarisse, Louisiana Association of Cooperatives, socialism, Progressivism, co-op, civil rights, Father Albert McKnight, Hurrican Katrina, Tom Dent, Louisiana, Black Arts Movement, Henry Hermes, transnationalism, New Orleans Consumers’ Co-operative Union, community development, White Laboringmen’s Protective Association, International Cooperative Alliance, AFL, Housewives’ League, labor, American Federation of Labor, cooperative organizing, Federation of Southern Cooperatives, depression, Gathering Tree Growers Collective, Hollygrove Market and Farm, Free Southern Theater Collective, Rochdale model, Inez Meyers, Rochdale, democracy, Brotherhood of Co-operative Commonwealth, Freret neighborhood, urban, Freret Business Men’s Association, women’s movement, Citizens’ Committee to Test the Constitutionality of Louisiana’s Separate Car Act, South, ethnicity, social movements, citizenship, alternative economics, General Federation of Women’s Clubs, August Graf, coop, Harvey Reed