The Defying Gentrification Playbook, Kristen E Jeffers (9781733456234) — Readings Books

Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier. Sign in or sign up for free!

Become a Readings Member. Sign in or sign up for free!

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre to view your orders, change your details, or view your lists, or sign out.

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre or sign out.

In Victoria? Order in-stock items by Sunday 14 December to get your gifts by Christmas! Or find the deadline for your state here.

The Defying Gentrification Playbook
Hardback

The Defying Gentrification Playbook

$100.99
Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to your wishlist.

A Black, Queer, FeminIst, Disabled, Urbanist Guide, Toolkit, and Companion for modern life on Earth from one of the world's most notable contemporary urbanists and the creator of The Black Urbanist multimedia platform.

We all know the rent is too damn high, and everything, from getting our hair done to eating our soul foods from across the African Diaspora, is increasingly out of reach and touch, despite being practices our ancestors perfected. And let's not even get started with being surveilled, policed, incarcerated, denied, and killed just for who we are as Black folks.

But Kristen Jeffers doesn't believe gentrification is inevitable, and they're done with taking gentrification on the nose.

After years of trying to convince their urbanist colleagues to reform their publications, organizations, local governments, community groups, and even their own attitudes around cultural diversity, equity, inclusion, and the ills of gentrification, they stepped away from the global urbanism scene for awhille, wrote a maniefesto and started to test out how to live as much of their lives as they could, while preserving energy to clapback just in time.

Or maybe never, because as a Black autistic nonbinary person who has been socialized and perceived as a woman their entire lives, rest is resistance (Thanks Nap Bishop and Nap Ministry).

This workbook is the result of that necessary pause. It's here for you as a fellow sista-sibling to learn how to embody rest as resistance, even if the rent is coming due. It's built around their Defying Gentrification Manifesto mantra: "I can have faith, I can engage in cultivation and creativity and self-care, but I need community care, access, infrastructure, and convenience to defy gentrification."

Interactive, with workbook pages and stories from their years in urbanism, there's something for everyone, but this one is especially for their sistas and siblings, because intersectionality is real and so is misogynoir, and if that was stopped, the entire world would stop being trash.

"I love that it's informative AND actionable, but digestible because I feel like these topics (rightfully) can get a little heavy/academic at times, but as a non-academic, I appreciate how easy to read it is"

L'Oreal Thompson Payton, author of Stop Waiting for Perfect and owner/operator of Zora's Place Bookstore in Evanston, IL.

Read More
In Shop
Out of stock
Shipping & Delivery

$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout

MORE INFO

Stock availability can be subject to change without notice. We recommend calling the shop or contacting our online team to check availability of low stock items. Please see our Shopping Online page for more details.

Format
Hardback
Publisher
Kristen Jeffers Media
Date
16 December 2025
Pages
120
ISBN
9781733456234

A Black, Queer, FeminIst, Disabled, Urbanist Guide, Toolkit, and Companion for modern life on Earth from one of the world's most notable contemporary urbanists and the creator of The Black Urbanist multimedia platform.

We all know the rent is too damn high, and everything, from getting our hair done to eating our soul foods from across the African Diaspora, is increasingly out of reach and touch, despite being practices our ancestors perfected. And let's not even get started with being surveilled, policed, incarcerated, denied, and killed just for who we are as Black folks.

But Kristen Jeffers doesn't believe gentrification is inevitable, and they're done with taking gentrification on the nose.

After years of trying to convince their urbanist colleagues to reform their publications, organizations, local governments, community groups, and even their own attitudes around cultural diversity, equity, inclusion, and the ills of gentrification, they stepped away from the global urbanism scene for awhille, wrote a maniefesto and started to test out how to live as much of their lives as they could, while preserving energy to clapback just in time.

Or maybe never, because as a Black autistic nonbinary person who has been socialized and perceived as a woman their entire lives, rest is resistance (Thanks Nap Bishop and Nap Ministry).

This workbook is the result of that necessary pause. It's here for you as a fellow sista-sibling to learn how to embody rest as resistance, even if the rent is coming due. It's built around their Defying Gentrification Manifesto mantra: "I can have faith, I can engage in cultivation and creativity and self-care, but I need community care, access, infrastructure, and convenience to defy gentrification."

Interactive, with workbook pages and stories from their years in urbanism, there's something for everyone, but this one is especially for their sistas and siblings, because intersectionality is real and so is misogynoir, and if that was stopped, the entire world would stop being trash.

"I love that it's informative AND actionable, but digestible because I feel like these topics (rightfully) can get a little heavy/academic at times, but as a non-academic, I appreciate how easy to read it is"

L'Oreal Thompson Payton, author of Stop Waiting for Perfect and owner/operator of Zora's Place Bookstore in Evanston, IL.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Kristen Jeffers Media
Date
16 December 2025
Pages
120
ISBN
9781733456234