Media
Panels
The Future of Chocolate City
Whose Neighborhood?
Gentrification: Deracination of the Black Community in Harlem and Washington, DC
Publications
Washington, D.C.: The District of Gentrification
https://ncrc.org/gentrification-dc/
Capital Dilemma: Growth and Inequality in Washington, DC. Derek Hyra and Sabiyha Prince, editors, NY: Routledge Press, 2016
African Americans and Gentrification in Washington, DC: Race, Class, and Social Justice in the Nation’s Capital, London: Ashgate Publishers, 2014
Constructing Belonging: Race, Class and Harlem’s Professional Workers, NY: Routledge Press, 2004
“Islam: As American As Sweet Potato Pie” The Atlanta Post, Sep 24, 2010
www.atlantapost.com/2010/09/24/slam-as-american-as-sweet-potato-pie
“Race and Comedy” The Huffington Post, May 6, 2009,
www.huffingtonpost.com/sabiyha-prince/race-and-american-comedy_b_197814.html -
“Will the Real Black Middle Class Please Stand Up?” In More Unequal, New York: Monthly Review Press, 2007
“Will the Real Black Middle Class Please Stand Up? In The Monthly Review, Vol., 58(3): 67-79, July/August 2006
“Manhattan Africans: Contradiction, Continuity, and Authenticity in a Colonial Heritage,” in Afro-Atlantic Dialogues: Anthropology in the Diaspora, Kevin Yelvington, ed.: 291-327, Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research, 2006
“Race, Class, and the Packaging of Harlem,” Identities, (12):385-404, 2005
“Changing Places, Race, Class and Belonging in the “New” Harlem,” in Urban Anthropology, Brett Williams and Sabiyha Prince, editors, Vol. 31(1): 5-35, Spring, 2002
“Qualitative Methodologies and Community Participation in Examining Reproductive Experiences: The Harlem BirthRight Project,” in Maternal and Child Health Journal, Vol. 5, (2); 85-93, 2001, Leith Mullings, Alaka Wali, Diane McLean, Janet Mitchell, Sabiyha Prince, Deborah Thomas and Patricia Tovar
"Sexist and Misguided", Review of Sharazad Ali's The Blackman's Guide to Understanding the Blackwoman in Against the Current 31: 46-47, March/April, 1991
Media Appearances
https://www.google.com/amp/s/slate.com/culture/2019/04/go-go-music-gentrification-washington-d-c.amp
Internet
“Islam: As American As Sweet Potato Pie” The Atlanta Post, Sep 24, 2010
This piece argues that Islam is not a foreign religion but a part of the Judeo-Christian system of religious belief.
http:/atlantapost.com/2010/09/24/slam-as-american-as-sweet-potato-pie.html
“Race and Comedy” The Huffington Post, May 6, 2009.
This piece touched upon themes that I will tackle in my future examination of gender, race and comedy in American culture. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sabiyha-prince/race-and-american-comedy_b_197814.html
Radio
WTOP—It’s Primarily Racial— interviewed by Hallie Mellendorf on gentrification
WAMU—Interviewed by Jacob Metro Connection program on gentrification, September 26, 2014
WYPR—Interviewed by Tom Hall for Maryland Mornings, Interviewed by Tom Hall for Midday (gentrification and social justice
http://wypr.org/post/gentrification-and-social-justice-baltimore , April 10, 2018
NPR—interviewed by Neda Ulaby for All Things Considered story about the Bravo television show The Real Housewives of D.C.
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128935825
August 3rd, 2010
WPFW—Pacifica Radio Network, Washington, D.C.
Spirit in Action
May 2006, Tribute to the show’s host, the late Damu Smith,
August 2005
The host requested I come on and comment on a story that appeared in The Washington Post about the adults who were locked out of a public school education after the Brown vs. The Board of Education decision of 1954 when their schools closed in Prince Edward County, Virginia closed rather than comply with the order to admit African American students
June 2004, “Responding to Bill Cosby,”
September 2002, “What is Racism?”
2002, “Why African Americans Feel Guilty about the Sniper Shootings,”
WOL—Washington, DC The Mark Thompson Show “Racism in America,” September 2002
WES—Wesleyan University Radio, Midletown, Ct Horizontal Power Hour “Gentrification”
https://horizontalpowerhour.wordpress.com/tag/anthropology
April 2003
Television
Al Jazeera English—“There Goes the Neighborhood” https://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/2010/09/2010927114430608793.html
2001
MSNBC
Hardball with Chris Matthews discussion of the Don Imus racist slur against Rutgers women’s basketball team
www.nbcnews.com/id/18056320/ns/...hardball_with.../hardball-chris-matthews-april/
April 10, 2007
C-SPAN TV
”Racism in the post 9/11 Period” Martin Luther King Celebration, 19th Street Baptist Church, Washington, DC
January 21, 2002
Documentaries
Coffee Shops and Dog Parks: Diversity Seeking in Changing Neighborhoods
https://vimeo.com/106674926
Policing Gentrification
https://vimeo.com/josephmarcus/policing-gentrification
Filmmaking
Writer/Director, Diminished Returns
released August 2024
Produced by iF, a Foundation for Radical Possibility
Co-director, Barry Farm: Community, Land, and Justice in Washington, DC
co-directed with Samuel George 2022
Produced by the Bertelsmann Foundation and the DC Legacy Project
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pRONYRWY-KY
Screenings
Martin Luther King Jr. Library, Woodridge Library, Anacostia Library, Mount Pleasant Library, Dorothy Height Library, University of Pennsylvania, University of Maryland, The Building Museum, Ivy City Clubhouse/Empower DC, DC Public Defenders Services, DC Attorney Generals Office, Global Academy
Awards
Buchanan Vernacular Architecture Forum 2022 Paul E. Buchanan Award
This award was given to the DC legacy project and the film’s directors for excellence in fieldwork, interpretation, and public service
DC Preservation League, Excellence in Historic Preservation Awards 2022 Award for Excellence in Community Outreach and Education
This award was given to the DC Legacy Project and the documentary directors
Co-producer, La Manplesa
Directed by Ellie Walton
2021