Our cultural fascination with decay is pervasive and profound. The visual vocabulary of ruination connects the decay of built spaces to the aging of human bodies: a death spectacle. But in the Rockaways, New York City’s thin ribbon of battered coastline, we discover that the vulgar voyeurism of the decay-seeking gaze is more closely connected to our social understanding of wealth than to our animal understanding of death. (More…)
Author: Jonah WaltersJonah Walters is a BA Candidate at NYU. He has twice received the Dean’s Award for Summer Research.
Jonah Walters is a BA Candidate at NYU. He has twice received the Dean’s Award for Summer Research.