New Books in Sociology

Nicole E. Trujillo-Pagán, "Detroit Never Left: Black Space, White Borders, Latino Crossings" (NYU Press, 2025)

Mar 3, 2026
Nicole E. Trujillo-Pagán, sociologist and author studying race, space, and urban change in Detroit. She discusses how media tropes and mapping practices shape investment and erase resident voices. The conversation covers interviews with Latino youth, modern forms of redlining, and how policy and market-making remake urban space.
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INSIGHT

Words About Detroit Shape Real Outcomes

  • Words and narratives about Detroit shape investment, migration, and public perception.
  • Nicole Trujillo-Pagán shows media tropes influence whether people spend, move, or invest in the city, not just reflect reality.
INSIGHT

Empty Abstractions Create A Fiction Of Decline

  • Media uses 'empty abstractions' like vacancy and nature to create a fiction of decline.
  • Trujillo-Pagán notes articles showed animals and vacant houses without resident voices, actively silencing Detroiters.
ANECDOTE

Felix Reframes Crime As Outsider Abstraction

  • A Latino youth named Felix described crime as an outsider's abstraction while feeling safe locally.
  • Felix framed a neighbor's illegal activity as entrepreneurial, showing lived safety differs from statistics.
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