On the Chilean social explosion
In: Routledge studies in radical history and politics
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In: Routledge studies in radical history and politics
In: Space and place volume 19
On So-Called Nonpolitical Urban Environmentalism : The Architecture of the Open City, Politics, and the Political -- Refashioning Latin Americanism : The Foundations of the Environmental Urbanism of the Open City -- The Eruption of the Political? : Politics, the Political, Hospitality, and the Foundation of the Open City -- Thinking Otherwise : Keeping the Open City Open in the Dictatorship -- On Subaltern Historiography : Thinking the Open City Historically -- Towards a Decolonial Environmentalism : The Limits and Openings of the Open City's Environmental Urbanisms -- Socialities, New Openings and the Lingering Question of Capital.
In: Journal of Urban Cultural Studies, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 223-241
ISSN: 2050-9804
This article makes a triple intervention into discussions about the relationship between subaltern collective memory, urban historiography and urban social movements. First, and more theoretically, I argue that grassroots urban social movements require a corresponding history to unite people into a collective urban social agent. In short, there are no urban social movements without a shared urban history to bring them together. The cultural struggle over defining a city's urban meaning is waged not only by material political fights, but also over how we represent the past of our cities. Second, I argue that ruling urban classes circulate and popularize their own urban history in order to disrupt autonomous grassroots urban history formation. Third, and lastly, said historiographical struggle manifests itself in how we represent the pasts of Indigenous peoples in the cities of the Americas. I make this argument through a critical reading of Nona Fernández's representation of the Indigenous past of Santiago de Chile in her 2002 novel Mapocho.
In: Cultural critique, Band 119, Heft 1, S. 140-166
ISSN: 1534-5203
In: Cultural studies, Band 36, Heft 4, S. 519-542
ISSN: 1466-4348
In: Cultural politics: an international journal ; exploring cultural and political power across the globe, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 202-222
ISSN: 1751-7435
Recent criticisms of regionalization and urbanization in the Anthropocene have argued that actors are increasingly producing uninhabitable spaces, in which oppressed and marginalized groups are either left to die or forced into a rootless existence of constant displacement. Through an examination of the cultural politics of current discussions of uninhabitability in the Anthropocene, this article argues against the logic of un/inhabitability—demonstrating its necessity to imagine itself against a subhuman other that was embodied, at least in Europe in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, in the anti-Semitic representation of Jews—and proposes that the conceptual framework of in/hospitability can be substituted in a way that both maintains the logic of un/inhabitability's beneficial aspects—its illumination of the inequitable distribution of environmental harms in the Anthropocene and of the relationship between cultural formations and dwelling—and abandons its problematic underpinnings. In this way, the embrace of in/hospitability recommends not a rejection of the logic of un/inhabitability but its development through productive critique.