The Black Mall: A Cultural History of Buying, Belonging, and Becoming

Beyond The Table • December 10, 2025 • Solo Episode

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In this episode, we explore the rise and fall of the Black mall one of the most important and overlooked cultural spaces in late twentieth-century America. From segregation-era restrictions to the emergence of malls as Black social hubs in the 1980s and 1990s, this episode traces how Black consumers reshaped retail, identity, and community across generations. We take you through the history of restricted access, postwar suburbanization, the migration of Black families into new commercial spaces, and the cultural energy that made malls feel like community centers, fashion runways, and social worlds. We also look at the economic forces that led to mall decline and what remains culturally, even after the escalators stopped. New episodes of Beyond the Table release every Tuesday. Follow the show on Instagram: @AmandaPaints1214 Tictok: beyondthetablepod Email: beyondthetablecast@gmail.com Resources Business Insider — "The rise and fall of the American Shopping Mall" Brookings Institution -  Black Buying Power Atlas Obscura — "The Life and Death of the American Mall" Forbes - "It's the End of the Mall As We Know It ... And I Feel Fine" Written and produced by Amanda Clemons © 2025 Beyond the Table. All rights reserved

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