Orly Cleage” The New Noir: Race, Identity, and Diaspora in Black Suburbia”
              
        Book Discussion and Signing
          
        
            
        Join us for this engaging discussion and book signing at Underground Books.
  The expansion of the Black American middle class and the
  unprecedented increase in the number of Black immigrants since
  the 1960s have transformed the cultural landscape of New
  York.
  
  In The New Noir, Orly Clerge explores the richly complex
  worlds of an extraordinary generation of Black middle class
  adults who have migrated from different corners of the African
  diaspora to suburbia. The Black middle class today consists of
  diverse groups whose ongoing cultural, political, and material
  ties to the American South and Global South shape their cultural
  interactions at work, in their suburban neighborhoods, and at
  their kitchen tables. Clerge compellingly analyzes the making of
  a new multinational Black middle class and how they create a
  spectrum of Black identities that help them carve out places of
  their own in a changing 21st-century global city.
  
  Paying particular attention to the largest Black ethnic groups in
  the country, Black Americans, Jamaicans, and Haitians, Clerge’s
  ethnography draws on over 80 interviews with residents to examine
  the overlooked places where New York’s middle class resides in
  Queens and Long Island. This book reveals that region and
  nationality shape how the Black middle class negotiates the
  everyday politics of race and class.
