1. Detroit Grease Shop Poem

    Four bright steel crosses,
    universal joints, plucked
    out of the burlap sack —
    “the heart of the drive train,”
    the book says. Stars
    on Lemon’s wooden palm,
    stars that must be capped,
    rolled, and anointed,
    that have their orders
    and their commands as he
    has his.

    Under the blue
    hesitant light another day
    at Automotive
    in the city of dreams.
    We’re all here to count
    and be counted, Lemon,
    Rosie, Eugene, Luis,
    and me, too young to know
    this is for keeps, pinning
    on my apron, rolling up
    my sleeves.

    The roof leaks
    from yesterday’s rain,
    the waters gather above us
    waiting for one mistake.
    When a drop falls on Lemon’s
    corded arm, he looks at it
    as though it were something
    rare or mysterious
    like a drop of water or
    a single lucid meteor
    fallen slowly from
    nowhere and burning on
    his skin like a tear.

    - Philip Levine

    *a classic poem about Detroit by Detroit poet and former poet laureate Philip Levine (interview here). On the show today, Charlie LeDuff talks about his book Detroit: An American Autopsy.

  2. Fresh Air

    Interviews

    Philip Levine

    Detroit

    Charlie LeDuff

  1. Today on the show we’re talking to Charlie LeDuff about Detroit and the term ‘ruin porn’ comes up in the conversation. So for some background, here’s an excellent essay, “Detroitism: What does ruin porn tell us about the Motor City, ourselves, other American cities” by John Patrick Leary.
Guernica:

That some of the recent focus on Detroit ruins is exploitative in its depiction of Detroit’s impoverishment bears repeating, but more compelling are the reasons for our contemporary fascination with images of first-world urban decline, and not just in the Motor City. Ruin websites, photography collections, and urban exploration blogs chronicle industrial ruins across North America and Europe, from Youngstown, Ohio to Bucharest, Romania. Yet Detroit remains the Mecca of urban ruins.

Image of the Detroit Marine Harbor Terminal by JRE313 via Flickr

    Today on the show we’re talking to Charlie LeDuff about Detroit and the term ‘ruin porn’ comes up in the conversation. So for some background, here’s an excellent essay, “Detroitism: What does ruin porn tell us about the Motor City, ourselves, other American cities” by John Patrick Leary.

    Guernica:

    That some of the recent focus on Detroit ruins is exploitative in its depiction of Detroit’s impoverishment bears repeating, but more compelling are the reasons for our contemporary fascination with images of first-world urban decline, and not just in the Motor City. Ruin websites, photography collections, and urban exploration blogs chronicle industrial ruins across North America and Europe, from Youngstown, Ohio to Bucharest, Romania. Yet Detroit remains the Mecca of urban ruins.

    Image of the Detroit Marine Harbor Terminal by JRE313 via Flickr

  2. Fresh Air

    Coming up

    Detroit

    Charlie LeDuff

    John Patrick Leary

  1. detroitnewsarchivist:

June 1 1935

An amazing photo archive of Detroit. Enjoy. View in High-Res

    detroitnewsarchivist:

    June 1 1935

    An amazing photo archive of Detroit. Enjoy.

  2. detroit

    photography

    black and white

    cities

  1. “Some 1,200 feet beneath the streets of Detroit,” writes Atlas Obscura, “runs 100 miles of subterranean roads over an area of more than 1,500 acres. It is the Detroit Salt Mine  and as a Detroit industry it is older than automobiles. As a geological  entity, this salt deposit is older even than the dinosaurs.” (via Pruned) View in High-Res

    “Some 1,200 feet beneath the streets of Detroit,” writes Atlas Obscura, “runs 100 miles of subterranean roads over an area of more than 1,500 acres. It is the Detroit Salt Mine and as a Detroit industry it is older than automobiles. As a geological entity, this salt deposit is older even than the dinosaurs.” (via Pruned)

  2. landscape architecture

    detroit

    detroit salt mines