Free Content Property and propriety: Jewish landlords in early twentieth-century Toronto

Author: Dennis R.

Source: Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, Volume 22, Number 3, September 1997 , pp. 377-397(21)

Publisher: Royal Geographical Society

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Abstract:

Drawing on literatures on the social construction of place and identity, and on the changing nature of urban property ownership, this paper examines Jewish immigrants to Toronto as housing landlords, situating their activities in the context of wider changes in the city's housing market and of their needs to raise capital, achieve status and foster group identity. Using archival and newspaper evidence to reconstruct the behaviour of individual landlords, it is argued that ownership of inner-city property fulfilled numerous functions, especially related to other aspects of business proprietorship, but that it also accentuated the geographical concentration of poorer Jews, with critical implications for their relations with non-Jews.

Keywords: Toronto; social construction; housing landlordism; ethnicity; inner city; historical geography

Language: English

Document Type: Research article

Publication date: 1997-09-01

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