RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Becoming Aggrieved: An Alternative Framework of Care in Black Chicago JF RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences FD Russell Sage Foundation SP 31 OP 41 DO 10.7758/RSF.2015.1.2.03 VO 1 IS 2 A1 Ralph, Laurence YR 2015 UL http://www.rsfjournal.org/content/1/2/31.abstract AB Centering on “Eastwood,” a low-income, African American community on the West Side of Chicago in which I have conducted ethnographic research since 2007, I examine the coping mechanisms developed by residents after Mrs. Lana suffers what her doctors view as a psychotic break. I build upon Judith Butler’s conception of grief to reconceptualize madness as a sometimes productive force that allows scholars to see how certain populations are systematically dehumanized. After divulging a brief history of Mrs. Lana’s community, wherein I discuss how it came to inhabit the socioeconomic markers of poverty it is known for today, I explore in further detail the circumstances surrounding Mrs. Lana’s mental illness. Ultimately, I argue that the story of her “madness” is productive because it gives us valuable insight into the ways in which blacks, especially those living in low-income communities that face a dearth of institutional resources, invert popular expectations of mourning, thereby developing a concept of “becoming aggrieved” that does not merely lament death, but also affirms life.