
New Books in Sociology Kimberley Johnson, "Dark Concrete: Black Power Urbanism and the American Metropolis" (Cornell UP, 2025)
Jan 25, 2026
Kimberley Johnson, political scientist and author of Dark Concrete, studies how Black Power remade American cities. She maps local struggles in Newark, Oakland, East Orange, and East Palo Alto. Short takes on housing displacement, schooling as self-determination, policing reform, and how local activism turned into lasting urban institutions and ideas.
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Local Origins, Diverse Practices
- Black Power emerged through local insurgencies rather than a single national blueprint and peaked in the late 1960s–1970s.
- Local conditions shaped distinct meanings and practices of Black Power across cities.
Look Beyond Official Archives
- Use broader archival sources beyond official records to reconstruct movements' ideas and practices.
- Kimberley Johnson recommends newspapers, movement publications, oral histories, art, and music to capture Black Power Urbanism.
Case Selection Shows Institutional Effects
- Comparing Newark, East Orange, Oakland, and East Palo Alto reveals how institution types and regional context shaped Black Power strategies.
- Johnson traces connections among activists across these cities despite distinct local articulations.

