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The terms urban and suburban should therefore be used mindfully and only when evoking all aspects of those specific American experiences.Masada is a dramatically located site of great natural beauty overlooking the Dead Sea, a rugged natural fortress on which the Judaean king Herod the Great constructed a sumptuous palace complex in classical Roman style. Each of these circumstances and identities is a mix of class and geography, albeit with strong racial associations. Nor should suburban be used indiscriminately to reference white America. While the terms urban or inner-city can evoke one specific minority experience in the United States, they should not be used interchangeably with racial identity words like Black or African American. If someone who authentically claims an urban identity creates a line of clothing and markets it to suburban consumers, is calling that clothing urban acceptable? Does the Grammy for Best Urban Contemporary Album promote recognition of R & B fusion artists, or does it mean that there are two separate but equal Grammy Awards for Album of the Year? It should be clear whether one is talking about race (Black civil rights leaders), poverty (educational opportunities for low socioeconomic status students), or geography (urban food insecurity and rural hunger). Even accurate use of the word urban may raise troubling racial issues. If two cowboys get into a fist fight in a rural honky-tonk, and if one of them is white and one is Black, the reporting of that story should in no way refer to one of those men as urban. Even more offensive is the inaccurate substitution of urban to mean Black when not referring to city dwellers. Urban poverty still exists, but its current manifestation doesn’t match the stereotypes of decay, gang violence, and drug culture built around news stories and images from the 1970s and 1980s. Urban renewal and gentrification have brought new residents and assets to city centers. Such use is inaccurate and outdated because city neighborhoods have been steadily changing.
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However, as a euphemism for slums, crime, or race, the use of the term urban is inaccurate, outdated, and offensive. The term urban can factually describe a particular living situation, for example, urban poverty versus rural poverty. Similarly, in discussions about poverty, crime, and drugs, the terms inner-city and urban became convenient euphemisms for Black -a way to avoid implying causality between race and life circumstance. By the end of the 20th century, inner-city urban life was associated with African Americans of low socioeconomic status. In response, the government built housing projects for low-income residents, but this further concentrated poverty in isolated neighborhoods (ghettos that became popularly known as 'hoods ). Meanwhile, urban life, especially in the inner city, became increasingly associated with poverty and decay. Discrimination over the years kept suburbia largely white and wealthy, enjoying well-funded school districts and other amenities. Many white families abandoned inner-city neighborhoods, relocating themselves and their assets to suburban communities. In the 1950s, courts outlawed segregation and mandated the racial integration of schools, resulting in decades of white flight. This migration north transformed the historically rural Black American experience into an urban one. In the early 20th century, factories in northern cities recruited large numbers of African Americans from southern states. This has given rise to a coded language in which the terms urban and suburban have distinct racial connotations. In the United States, racial identities have historically been interwoven with disparate economic and geographical experiences.