
New Books Network 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 explores how media narratives and data-making practices shape investment, displacement, and who's valued in the city. Short segments cover Latino youth perspectives, redlining’s modern echoes, demolition-driven markets, corporate mapping, and how abstractions remake democracy and resources.
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Empty Abstractions Shape Detroit's Story
- Media narratives about Detroit operate as "empty abstractions" that misrepresent residents' lived realities.
- Nicole Trujillo-Pagán shows headlines pairing vacancy and wildlife with people, silencing resident voices and shaping investment choices.
Felix Reframes Crime As Outsider Myth
- A Latino youth named Felix framed neighborhood crime as an outsider invention and praised a neighbor's illicit work as entrepreneurship.
- Trujillo-Pagán repeated interviews with Felix to show how statistics labeled his safe, proud barrio as criminal.
Overlay For The Underplay Reveals Hidden Agendas
- Trujillo-Pagán used in vivo coding across interviews and media to track patterned words that have material effects.
- She links residents' phrase "overlay for the underplay" to how elites mystify goals while pursuing extraction.

