Abstract
This paper provides insight into how place can be important to the goals of a social movement. Through analysis of a series of historical events, I explore how a place can be constructed by a social movement to act rhetorically and then can be reconstructed through repeated usage to signify a larger meaning. To illustrate these concepts, I examine the creation, evolution, and transformation of Pittsburgh’s “Freedom Corner” as a site of resistance.
Notes
1. My thanks goes to RR reviewers David Holmes and David Fleming for their thoughtful revision suggestions.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Derek G. Handley
Derek G. Handley is an Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Composition at Lehigh University. He is currently working on a book length manuscript that examines African-American communities in Pittsburgh, St. Paul, Minnesota, and Milwaukee as they resisted urban renewal. He can be reached at [email protected]