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Born in Flames

The Business of Arson and the Remaking of the American City

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Pub Date 19 Aug 2025 | Archive Date 31 Jul 2025

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Description

A revelatory account of the wave of arson-for-profit that hit American cities in the 1970s, and of the tenants who put out the fires and reclaimed their neighborhoods.

“Ladies and gentlemen, the Bronx is burning!” That legendary and apocryphal phrase, allegedly uttered by announcers during the 1977 World Series as flames rose above Yankee Stadium, seemed to encapsulate an entire era in this nation’s urban history. Across that decade, a wave of arson coursed through American cities, destroying entire neighborhoods home to poor communities of color.

Yet as historian Bench Ansfield demonstrates in Born in Flames, the vast majority of the fires were not set by residents, as is commonly assumed, but by landlords looking to collect insurance payouts. Driven by perverse incentives—new government-sponsored insurance combined with tanking property values—landlords hired “torches,” mostly Black and Brown youth, to set fires in the buildings, sometimes with people still living in them. Tens of thousands of families lost their homes to these blazes, yet for much of the 1970s, tenant vandalism and welfare fraud stood as the prevailing explanations for the arson wave, effectively indemnifying landlords.

Ansfield’s book, based on a decade of research, introduces the term “brownlining” for the destructive insurance practices imposed on poor communities of color under the guise of racial redress. Ansfield shows that as the FIRE industries—finance, insurance, and real estate— eclipsed manufacturing in the 1970s, they began profoundly reshaping Black and Brown neighborhoods, seeing them as easy sources of profit. At every step, Ansfield charts the tenant-led resistance movements that sprung up in the Bronx and elsewhere, as well as the explosion of popular culture around the fires, from iconic movies like The Towering Inferno to hit songs such as “Disco Inferno.” Ultimately, they show how similarly pernicious dynamics around insurance and race are still at play in our own era, especially in regions most at risk of climate shocks.

About the Author: Bench Ansfield is an assistant professor of history at Temple University. Ansfield holds a PhD in American studies from Yale University and won the Allan Nevins Prize for the best dissertation in American history from the Society of American Historians. They live in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

A revelatory account of the wave of arson-for-profit that hit American cities in the 1970s, and of the tenants who put out the fires and reclaimed their neighborhoods.

“Ladies and gentlemen, the Bronx...


Advance Praise

"A young historian’s superlative debut…this excellent book delivers the truth about ‘the burning years." -Kirkus Reviews (starred)

"This outstanding book will change everything that we think we know about what happened to American cities in the late twentieth century. A masterpiece of history." -Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and author of Race for Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership

"Reading like a detective novel, Born in Flames is a devastating account of how the global insurance industry, property owners, and the federal government were the real arsonists, turning the ‘creative destruction’ of black and brown neighborhoods into profit and spectacle. By seeing the world through the Bronx, Bench Ansfield upends conventional narratives of the 1970s, capitalism’s global crisis, protest politics, even the origins of hip-hop. Destined to become a classic." -Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Race Rebels: Culture, Politics, and the Black Working Class

"Bench Ansfield exposes how the insurance industry, along with the federal government, collaborated and knowingly pushed my Bronx community further into poverty, despair, housing insecurity, and even death. . . . Having lived through the fires, I commend Ansfield’s dedication to excavating the truth behind systemic racism. I am profoundly grateful to them for redeeming the generations that suffered through the firestorm." -Vivian Vázquez Irizarry, director of Decade of Fire

"Racial inequality persists because it was insured. In this beautifully written work, Bench Ansfield is the first to uncover crucial links between the 1970s wave of urban arson and the subsequent rise of finance in the United States. One of the very few essential books on the recent history of racial capitalism in the United States, and a revelatory and unusually creative history of race and risk." -Jonathan Levy, author of Ages of American Capitalism: A History of the United States

"A young historian’s superlative debut…this excellent book delivers the truth about ‘the burning years." -Kirkus Reviews (starred)

"This outstanding book will change everything that we think we know...


Available Editions

EDITION Hardcover
ISBN 9781324093510
PRICE US$31.99 (USD)
PAGES 352

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