

Winner, The David R. Coffin Publication Grant
A vibrant exploration of the everyday life of one of the most diverse places in the world: Queens, New York.
Remade by decades of immigration, Queens, New York, has emerged as an emblematic space of social mixing and encounters across multiple lines of difference. With its expansive subdivisions, tangled highways, and centerless form, it is also New York’s most enigmatic borough. It can feel alternately like a big city, a tight-knit village, a featureless industrial zone, or a sprawling suburban community. Through more than 200 contemporary photographs, Joseph Heathcott captures this multifaceted borough and one of the most diverse places in the United States.
Drawn from more than a decade of roaming around Queens and snapping photos, Heathcott conveys the juxtaposition of the ordinary and the extraordinary, the mundane and the surprising, and the staggering social diversity that best characterizes Queens. At the heart of the story are two separate but entwined histories: the rapid expansion of the borough’s built environment through the twentieth century, and the millions of people who have traveled from near and far to call Queens home. Newcomers have had to confront discrimination, white racial hostility, legal challenges, and language barriers. They have had to struggle to find adequate housing, places to worship, and jobs that pay enough to survive. And they have done all of this in the borough’s jumbled collection of neighborhoods, housing types, civic and religious institutions, factories and warehouses, commercial streets, and strip malls.
Heathcott makes primary use of documentary photography to bring these social and spatial realities of everyday life into relief. He also draws on demographic data, archival sources, planning documents, news stories, and reports. The result is a visual meditation on Queens that provides clues about an urban future where notions of citizenship and belonging are negotiated across multiple lines of difference, but where a sense of ”getting along”—however roughly textured and unfinished—has taken hold in the everyday life of the streets.
- Price: $34.95
- Pages: 208
- Carton Quantity: 10
- Publisher: Fordham University Press
- Imprint: Empire State Editions
- Publication Date: 3rd October 2023
- Trim Size: 10 x 10 in
- Illustration Note: 284 color illustrations
- ISBN: 9781531504519
- Format: Hardcover
- BISACs:
PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Street Photography
HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / General
Readable and succinct, with engaging images throughout. Heathcott makes the case for Queens as an example of how people from around the world can live together peacefully, adding to the diversity and cultural dynamism of the city at the same time.---Aaron Shkuda, Princeton-Mellon Initiative in Architecture, Urbanism, and the Humanities
It’s easy to overlook Queens. Lacking Manhattan’s glamour or Brownstone Brooklyn’s charm, it can appear to the casual observer as a jumble of unremarkable working- and middle-class neighborhoods glimpsed through a Taxi window on the way to the airport. Yet this is a mistake. In recent decades Queens has emerged one of most diverse and fascinating places on the planet. Joseph Heathcott’s remarkable photographs and rich, evocative descriptions capture the borough’s dense urbanism in all of its vibrance and layered complexity. For anyone interested in the future of superdiverse cities, this is a must read.---Philip Kasinitz, Presidential Professor of Sociology, Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
With vision and hard political work, Queens could become a template for what many cities might be, in its fortuitous confluence of almost everyone and everything, creating a spaciousness for and from practices of all kinds; a rough and tumble world worth living, whose images Heathcott offers as a gift.---AbdouMaliq Simone, author of The Surrounds: Urban Life Within and Beyond Capture
Global Queens is a quotidian elegy to the vast and intricate composition of movement, textures and vocabularie that vitalises New York. Joseph Heathcott’s poignant images of everyday life capture the fragile and persistent way we make meaning together. This lively document of Queens neighborhoods offers a nuanced and necessary view of a spirited social mosaic, formed amidst the pervasive politics of racial violence and reactionary nationalism.---Suzanne Hall, Professor in Sociology, London School of Economics & Political Science, UK
The photographer documents a New York City borough defined by its many contradictions.- Publishers Weekly
Global Queens gives us a close and intimate look at a world built by immigrant communities over multiple generations. Heathcott's gift is to provide a panoramic view of this dizzyingly expansive and profoundly complex place, showing how diverse landscapes and social relations don't just happen, they are the result of hard work by millions of people adapting the city to suit their lives.---Hitomi Iwasaki, Head of Exhibitions and Curator, Queens Museum
With kaleidoscopic views into the raw and eclectic urban landscapes of Queens, Global Queens takes us on a journey through the making of the most ethnically diverse place in the nation. As an immigrant and a former resident of the borough, the visual journey makes me realize that each of us, past and present, has played a part in its becoming, including its unique sense of multiplicity and belonging.---Jeff Hou, University of Washington, Seattle
From shops, street markets, and festivals to single family homes and high-rise apartments, the many dozens of photographs in Global Queens give a wonderful sense of how Asian, Caribbean, and Latin American immigration has transformed the landscape of what is now the most diverse county in the nation.---Nancy Foner, author of One Quarter of the Nation: Immigration and the Transformation of America
Global Queens challenges us to think about the personal and economic ties that connect places near and far, crossing national borders on all parts of the globe, and about how we define a city and its people.---Steven T. Moga, Smith College
In a perfect world, every city borough and neighborhood would benefit from a treatment as learned and gorgeous as Global Queens. Joseph Heathcott’s introductory essay is both lyrical and deeply informed; and his more than 150 photographs (each with a paragraph-length caption) are simply magnificent: they depict not just the borough’s most breathtaking vistas, but also everyday scenes of busy stores and restaurants, community festivals, industrial waterfronts, well-patronized parks, and places of worship and learning. This truly is a field guide to the kinds of people and places that make the nation’s cities great.---A. K. Sandoval-Strausz, author of Barrio America: How Latino Immigrants Saved the American City
Heathcott’s treatment of the ‘World's Borough’, with all its shapes, faces, and overlapping presents and pasts—there are so many!—is impressively researched, and dynamically photographed. As a transplant moving through his adopted hometown with camera, informed curiosity, and a clear, deep respect for its residents, Heathcott has created a super-informed walking-tour-style prismatic portrait of an ever-changing Queens as it stands today—or yesterday in some cases! On each page, another fascinating fact and/or image leads to more and more questions about the center-less borough of neighborhoods that has organically become the most diverse city on earth. Even in the most banal-seeming of streetscapes, Heathcott’s love of Queens is charismatically catching.---John Wang & Storm Garner, co-authors of The World Eats Here: Amazing Food and the Inspiring People Who Make It at New York’s Queens Night Market
Winner, The David R. Coffin Publication Grant
A vibrant exploration of the everyday life of one of the most diverse places in the world: Queens, New York.
Remade by decades of immigration, Queens, New York, has emerged as an emblematic space of social mixing and encounters across multiple lines of difference. With its expansive subdivisions, tangled highways, and centerless form, it is also New York’s most enigmatic borough. It can feel alternately like a big city, a tight-knit village, a featureless industrial zone, or a sprawling suburban community. Through more than 200 contemporary photographs, Joseph Heathcott captures this multifaceted borough and one of the most diverse places in the United States.
Drawn from more than a decade of roaming around Queens and snapping photos, Heathcott conveys the juxtaposition of the ordinary and the extraordinary, the mundane and the surprising, and the staggering social diversity that best characterizes Queens. At the heart of the story are two separate but entwined histories: the rapid expansion of the borough’s built environment through the twentieth century, and the millions of people who have traveled from near and far to call Queens home. Newcomers have had to confront discrimination, white racial hostility, legal challenges, and language barriers. They have had to struggle to find adequate housing, places to worship, and jobs that pay enough to survive. And they have done all of this in the borough’s jumbled collection of neighborhoods, housing types, civic and religious institutions, factories and warehouses, commercial streets, and strip malls.
Heathcott makes primary use of documentary photography to bring these social and spatial realities of everyday life into relief. He also draws on demographic data, archival sources, planning documents, news stories, and reports. The result is a visual meditation on Queens that provides clues about an urban future where notions of citizenship and belonging are negotiated across multiple lines of difference, but where a sense of ”getting along”—however roughly textured and unfinished—has taken hold in the everyday life of the streets.
- Price: $34.95
- Pages: 208
- Carton Quantity: 10
- Publisher: Fordham University Press
- Imprint: Empire State Editions
- Publication Date: 3rd October 2023
- Trim Size: 10 x 10 in
- Illustrations Note: 284 color illustrations
- ISBN: 9781531504519
- Format: Hardcover
- BISACs:
PHOTOGRAPHY / Subjects & Themes / Street Photography
HISTORY / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic (DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / General
Readable and succinct, with engaging images throughout. Heathcott makes the case for Queens as an example of how people from around the world can live together peacefully, adding to the diversity and cultural dynamism of the city at the same time.---Aaron Shkuda, Princeton-Mellon Initiative in Architecture, Urbanism, and the Humanities
It’s easy to overlook Queens. Lacking Manhattan’s glamour or Brownstone Brooklyn’s charm, it can appear to the casual observer as a jumble of unremarkable working- and middle-class neighborhoods glimpsed through a Taxi window on the way to the airport. Yet this is a mistake. In recent decades Queens has emerged one of most diverse and fascinating places on the planet. Joseph Heathcott’s remarkable photographs and rich, evocative descriptions capture the borough’s dense urbanism in all of its vibrance and layered complexity. For anyone interested in the future of superdiverse cities, this is a must read.---Philip Kasinitz, Presidential Professor of Sociology, Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
With vision and hard political work, Queens could become a template for what many cities might be, in its fortuitous confluence of almost everyone and everything, creating a spaciousness for and from practices of all kinds; a rough and tumble world worth living, whose images Heathcott offers as a gift.---AbdouMaliq Simone, author of The Surrounds: Urban Life Within and Beyond Capture
Global Queens is a quotidian elegy to the vast and intricate composition of movement, textures and vocabularie that vitalises New York. Joseph Heathcott’s poignant images of everyday life capture the fragile and persistent way we make meaning together. This lively document of Queens neighborhoods offers a nuanced and necessary view of a spirited social mosaic, formed amidst the pervasive politics of racial violence and reactionary nationalism.---Suzanne Hall, Professor in Sociology, London School of Economics & Political Science, UK
The photographer documents a New York City borough defined by its many contradictions.– Publishers Weekly
Global Queens gives us a close and intimate look at a world built by immigrant communities over multiple generations. Heathcott's gift is to provide a panoramic view of this dizzyingly expansive and profoundly complex place, showing how diverse landscapes and social relations don't just happen, they are the result of hard work by millions of people adapting the city to suit their lives.---Hitomi Iwasaki, Head of Exhibitions and Curator, Queens Museum
With kaleidoscopic views into the raw and eclectic urban landscapes of Queens, Global Queens takes us on a journey through the making of the most ethnically diverse place in the nation. As an immigrant and a former resident of the borough, the visual journey makes me realize that each of us, past and present, has played a part in its becoming, including its unique sense of multiplicity and belonging.---Jeff Hou, University of Washington, Seattle
From shops, street markets, and festivals to single family homes and high-rise apartments, the many dozens of photographs in Global Queens give a wonderful sense of how Asian, Caribbean, and Latin American immigration has transformed the landscape of what is now the most diverse county in the nation.---Nancy Foner, author of One Quarter of the Nation: Immigration and the Transformation of America
Global Queens challenges us to think about the personal and economic ties that connect places near and far, crossing national borders on all parts of the globe, and about how we define a city and its people.---Steven T. Moga, Smith College
In a perfect world, every city borough and neighborhood would benefit from a treatment as learned and gorgeous as Global Queens. Joseph Heathcott’s introductory essay is both lyrical and deeply informed; and his more than 150 photographs (each with a paragraph-length caption) are simply magnificent: they depict not just the borough’s most breathtaking vistas, but also everyday scenes of busy stores and restaurants, community festivals, industrial waterfronts, well-patronized parks, and places of worship and learning. This truly is a field guide to the kinds of people and places that make the nation’s cities great.---A. K. Sandoval-Strausz, author of Barrio America: How Latino Immigrants Saved the American City
Heathcott’s treatment of the ‘World's Borough’, with all its shapes, faces, and overlapping presents and pasts—there are so many!—is impressively researched, and dynamically photographed. As a transplant moving through his adopted hometown with camera, informed curiosity, and a clear, deep respect for its residents, Heathcott has created a super-informed walking-tour-style prismatic portrait of an ever-changing Queens as it stands today—or yesterday in some cases! On each page, another fascinating fact and/or image leads to more and more questions about the center-less borough of neighborhoods that has organically become the most diverse city on earth. Even in the most banal-seeming of streetscapes, Heathcott’s love of Queens is charismatically catching.---John Wang & Storm Garner, co-authors of The World Eats Here: Amazing Food and the Inspiring People Who Make It at New York’s Queens Night Market