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Tent City, Seattle

Refusing Homelessness and Making a Home
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Transforms our understanding of being unhoused in the United States Tent City 3 provides Seattle's unhoused people with a place to create and sustain not just shelter but a home. In 2000 it became one of the first organized, peer-operated tent encampments in the city, a type of community that has become more common throughout the West Coast and the United States in the intervening years. Based on groundbreaking participatory research and interviews, this book explores the lives of Tent City 3's residents and their efforts to reclaim dignity, freedom, and the deep human connection to one's own space. Tent City 3 upends stereotypes of homelessness by being a self-managed, self-governing, and largely self-supporting community of informal housing. Residents enact ongoing and relational homemaking practices that challenge widely accepted notions of private and public, self and other, and home and homeless. Tony Sparks reveals how small tasks undertaken in Tent City 3 contribute to a larger process of homemaking through practices of care, collectivity, and the creation of a commons. He also shows how the encampment's residents refuse the normative boundaries of private property to create and sustain a sense of home and resist the ongoing settler colonialism that justifies their exclusion. Brimming with insightful analysis and rich storytelling, Tent City, Seattle dispels myths about homelessness while placing the issue within the arc of American history.
Tony Sparks is associate professor of urban studies and planning at San Francisco State University.
Transforms our understanding of being unhoused in the United States
"Sparks presents the views of the homeless themselves in this portrait of this continuing housing crisis, which is a needed component in addressing this issue. . . . Other cities can benefit from this Seattle experience in trying to cope with homeless encampments." (Journal of Urban Affairs)
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