The Arabbers of Baltimore

Amazon.com Price: $19.95 (as of 26/03/2019 21:38 PST- Details)

Description

Few American cities, save Baltimore, mix history, art and commerce in such equal measures and invest in what many might call somewhat mundane matters such a lot symbolic importance. Such is certainly the case with Baltimore’s arabbers – the mysteriously named horsecart vendors whose trade represents at once the capillaries of the city’s complex food distribution system, a generations-old system of informal apprenticeship for young black men in commerce and the streets, and the symbolic reach of a small-town past into Baltimore’s big-city present.

There is nothing about he arabbers unique to Baltimore, with the exception of the name. And that name summons a few of the issues about who they’re and what they do that continue to spark debate about their prospects. Historically, there is little information about whether the term ‘arab’ used to be used to describe individuals in a similar fashion employed in other parts of the U.S., but Baltimore’s horsecart vendors have been known as ‘aras,’ ‘ay-rabs,’ and ‘Arrabers’ for most of this century.

How did the English slang word for homeless youth come to be applied to black (mostly) Baltimore horsecart vendors? The answer lies in the term’s denotation of not the nationality of ethnicity of the people referred to, nor their occupation, but their lack of fixedness. The 19th century English usage of ‘arab’ used to be meant to refer to the nomadic character of London street gangs. But the current and widely accepted meaning of ‘arab’ in Baltimore is both narrow and multilayered. ‘Arabbers’ are people who ‘arab’ this means that to sell foodstuffs from horse-drawn wagons.

Photographer and writer Roland Freeman’s ‘Arabbers of Baltimore’ is both a photographic and literary event. It’s as though the arabbers have seen themselves on the pages and spoken.

Home » Shop » Books » Subjects » Arts and Photography » History and Criticism » History » Americas » United States » State and Local » The Arabbers of Baltimore

Recent Products