Abstract
This article examines ways in which images and ideas about masculinity have been implicated in the social construction of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. In the 1950s and 1960s, this was the city's skid-road district, a location where damaged masculinity, represented by the figure of the derelict, was linked causally to the deterioration of the central-city landscape. The derelict was constituted as a figure of abjection that marked the outside boundary of respectable masculinity, and his presence provided a rationale for urban renewal. During the 1970s and the 1980s, community groups contested the representation of skid road. They attempted to reconstruct the area as the Downtown Eastside, a working-class neighborhood and community that was symbolized by another male figure: the aging, retired resource industry worker. This image was derived from the memory and experience of the people who lived there. But because it rested on the appropriation and reworking of the same association between masculinity and space on which skid road was based, it excluded significant groups of people from the community it defined.