Details

A Feminist Urban Theory for Our Time


A Feminist Urban Theory for Our Time

Rethinking Social Reproduction and the Urban
Antipode Book Series 1. Aufl.

von: Linda Peake, Elsa Koleth, Gokboru Sarp Tanyildiz, Rajyashree N. Reddy, darren patrick/dp

20,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 30.07.2021
ISBN/EAN: 9781119789178
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 320

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Beschreibungen

<p>What does a feminist urban theory look like for the twenty first century? This book puts knowledges of feminist urban scholars, feminist scholars of social reproduction, and other urban theorists into conversation to propose an approach to the urban that recognises social reproduction both as foundational to urban transformations and as a methodological entry-point for urban studies.</p> <ul> <li>Offers an approach feminist urban theory that remains intentionally cautious of universal uses of social reproduction theory, instead focusing analytical attention on historical contingency and social difference</li> <li>Eleven chapters that collectively address distinct elements of the contemporary crisis in social reproduction and the urban through the lenses of infrastructure and subjectivity formation as well as through feminist efforts to decolonize urban knowledge production</li> <li>Deepens understandings of how people shape and reshape the spatial forms of their everyday lives, furthering understandings of the 'infinite variety' of the urban</li> <li>Essential reading for academics, researchers and scholars within urban studies, human geography, gender and sexuality studies, and sociology</li> </ul>
<p>List of Contributors xi</p> <p>Series Editors’ Preface xiii</p> <p>Preface xv</p> <p><b>1 Rethinking Social Reproduction and the Urban 1<br /></b><i>Gökbörü Sarp Tanyildiz, Linda Peake, Elsa Koleth, Rajyashree N. Reddy, darren patrick/dp, and Susan Ruddick</i></p> <p>Introduction 1</p> <p>Social Reproduction 5</p> <p>Social Reproduction and the Urban 10</p> <p>Making the Urban Through Feminist Knowledge Production 13</p> <p>Infrastructures 13</p> <p>Subjectivities 17</p> <p>Decolonizing Feminist Urban Knowledge 21</p> <p>Methodologies 25</p> <p>The Limits of Social Reproduction 29</p> <p>Coda: Social Reproduction and the Urban During a Pandemic 31</p> <p>References 34</p> <p><b>2 Sociability and Social Reproduction in Times of Disaster: Exploring the Role of Expressive Urban Cultural Practices in Haiti and Puerto Rico 42<br /></b><i>Nathalia Santos Ocasio and Beverley Mullings</i></p> <p>Introduction 42</p> <p>The Hidden Transcript of Resilience and Its Social Reproductive Roots 47</p> <p>Sociability, Expressive Cultural Practice, and Social Reproduction in the Caribbean 51</p> <p>Social Reproduction and the Unbearable Subversions of Expressive Cultural Practice: Exploring the Power of Rabòday and Plena 53</p> <p>The Possibilities and Limits of Expressive Cultural Practice to Transformational Change 56</p> <p>References 61</p> <p><b>3 ‘Never/Again’: Reading the Qayqayt Nation and New Westminster in Public Poetry Installations 66<br /></b><i>Emily Fedoruk</i></p> <p>Introduction 66</p> <p>Social Reproduction and the Urban in the Context of Settler Colonialism 69</p> <p>Ask Again: Authorship and a Short History of the Qayqayt 74</p> <p>Colonial Legibility and the Postmodern Media of Recognition 80</p> <p>References 89</p> <p><b>4 Gender in Resistance: Emotion, Affective Labour, and Social Reproduction in Athens 92<br /></b><i>Mantha Katsikana</i></p> <p>Introduction 92</p> <p>Protest and Resistance in Athens 93</p> <p>Feminist Social Reproduction in the Context of Urban Activism 96</p> <p>Placing Social Reproduction in the Anti-authoritarian/Anarchist Commons 97</p> <p>The Commons and the De-politicization of the Personal 101</p> <p>Anarchist Commons: Performances and Cultures of Resistance and the Re-making of Safe Spaces 105</p> <p>Politicizing Emotion: Dispossession and Empowering Practices of Social Reproduction in the Urban 107</p> <p>Conclusion 110</p> <p>References 112</p> <p><b>5 ‘Sustaining Lives is What Matters’: Contested Infrastructure, Social Reproduction, and Feminist Urban Praxis in Catalonia 115<br /></b><i>James Angel</i></p> <p>Introduction 115</p> <p>Positionality and Praxis 117</p> <p>Social Reproduction, Infrastructure, and the Urban 119</p> <p>Contested Catalonia 121</p> <p>#AguaParaEsther 123</p> <p>Feminist Praxis 126</p> <p>Reproducing the Urban Otherwise 130</p> <p>Conclusion 132</p> <p>References 134</p> <p><b>6 Global Restructuring of Social Reproduction and Its Invisible Work in Urban Revitalization 138<br /></b><i>Faranak Miraftab</i></p> <p>Introduction 138</p> <p>A Landscape of New Inequalities in the Rustbelt and Its Social and Spatial Transformation 140</p> <p>Social Reproduction and Its Global Restructuring 143</p> <p>Relational Framing and Radical Feminist Urban Scholarship 144</p> <p>Social Reproduction and Feminist Urban Scholarship 147</p> <p>Outsourced Social Reproduction and Revitalization of Urban Space 150</p> <p>Conclusion 153</p> <p>References 157</p> <p><b>7 From the Kampung to the Courtroom: A Feminist Intersectional Analysis of the Human Right to Water as a Tool for Poor Women’s Urban Praxis in Jakarta 162<br /></b><i>Meera Karunananthan</i></p> <p>Introduction 162</p> <p>Methodology and Positionality 163</p> <p>Water, the Urban, and Social Reproduction 164</p> <p>The Privatization of Water and Anti-privatization Struggles in Indonesia 169</p> <p>Solidaritas Perempuan Jakarta and Poor Women’s Rights to Water 171</p> <p>Legal Challenges Against Privatization 172</p> <p>Community-based Research on the Impacts of Privatization 174</p> <p>Conclusion 178</p> <p>References 181</p> <p><b>8 Re-imagine Urban Antispaces! for a Decolonial Social Reproduction 186<br /></b><i>Natasha Aruri</i></p> <p>Introduction: Linking the ‘Anti-Politics Machine’ and Socio-Spacio-Cide 186</p> <p>The ‘Anti-Politics Machine’ in Palestine 190</p> <p>Socio-cide: Spatial Militarization and Antispaces 192</p> <p>Ramallah’s Tomorrow: Between Individualisms and Commons 200</p> <p>Refiguring and Reconfiguring for Resilience: Takhayyali [Imagine] Ramallah 203</p> <p>References 211</p> <p><b>9 Forced Displacement, Migration, and (Trans)national Care Networks: Practices of Urban Space Production in Colombia and Spain 215<br /></b><i>Camila Esguerra Muelle, Diana Ojeda, and Friederike Fleischer</i></p> <p>Introduction 215</p> <p>(Trans)national Care Networks, Social Reproduction, and Urban Space 217</p> <p>War, Migration, and Care: Colombian Care Workers in Spain 221</p> <p>Communitarian Mothers in Colombia 225</p> <p>Conclusion 229</p> <p>References 232</p> <p><b>10 Tenga Nehungwaru: Navigating Gendered Food Precarity in Three African Secondary Urban Settlements 236<br /></b><i>Belinda Dodson and Liam Riley</i></p> <p>Introduction 236</p> <p>Food and Social Reproduction in African Cities 239</p> <p>The Consuming Urban Poverty (CUP) Project: Research Methods and Researcher Positionality 241</p> <p>Urban Food Systems and Food Insecurity in Kitwe, Kisumu, and Epworth 244</p> <p>Lived Urban Geographies of Food Access and Food Poverty in Kitwe, Kisumu, and Epworth 247</p> <p>Marital Status, Household Form, and Gendered Occupations 247</p> <p>Food Procurement and Access 251</p> <p>Conclusion 255</p> <p>References 258</p> <p><b>11 Infrastructures of Social Reproduction: Dialogic Collaboration and Feminist Comparative Urbanism 262<br /></b><i>Tom Gillespie and Kate Hardy</i></p> <p>Introduction 262</p> <p>Feminist Urban Scholarship and Comparative Urbanism 263</p> <p>Thinking Comparatively Between Córdoba and London 265</p> <p>Dialogic Collaboration 268</p> <p>Situated Knowledge 269</p> <p>Solidarity 270</p> <p>Collaboration 271</p> <p>Iteration 272</p> <p>Gendered Urban Struggles in Córdoba and London 273</p> <p>Subjectivation 273</p> <p>Demands 275</p> <p>Strategy 276</p> <p>Infrastructures of Social Reproduction and the Urban 279</p> <p>Conclusion 280</p> <p>References 281</p> <p>Index 285</p>
‘Our time is fraught—global, intimate, differentiated—lived at different speeds with different horizons, but its insecurities and possibilities place social reproduction at its heart. This collection creatively and incisively reveals how centering social reproduction as theory and method reshapes the social ontology of the urban. Across sites and scales, an international group of authors offer compelling and original analyses of the material social practices and struggles that make social reproduction such a resonant frame to reimagine and remake urban social life so that it sings with possibility.’<br /><b>Cindi Katz, Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Environmental Psychology at The City University of New York, Graduate Center, USA</b>
<p><b>Linda Peake</b> is Principal Investigator on the SSHRC Partnership Grant, <i>Urbanization, Gender and the Global South: A Transformative Knowledge Network</i> (GenUrb) and Director of the City Institute at York University, Toronto, Canada.</p><p><b>Elsa Koleth</b> is a Post-Doctoral Fellow in the SSHRC Partnership Project <i>Urbanization, Gender and the Global South: A Transformative Knowledge Network</i> (GenUrb) at the City Institute at York University, Toronto, Canada.</p><p><b>Gökbörü Sarp Tanyildiz</b> is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Brock University, Canada.</p><p><b>Rajyashree N. Reddy</b> is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Toronto Scarborough, Canada.</p><p><b>darren patrick/dp</b> is a writer, organizer, teacher, and Publications Manager and Editor for <i>Urbanization, Gender and the Global South: A Transformative Knowledge Network</i> (GenUrb) based at the City Institute at York University, Canada.</p>
<p>‘Our time is fraught—global, intimate, differentiated—lived at different speeds with different horizons, but its insecurities and possibilities place social reproduction at its heart. This collection creatively and incisively reveals how centering social reproduction as theory and method reshapes the social ontology of the urban. Across sites and scales, an international group of authors offer compelling and original analyses of the material social practices and struggles that make social reproduction such a resonant frame to reimagine and remake urban social life so that it sings with possibility.’<BR><b>Cindi Katz, Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Environmental Psychology at The City University of New York, Graduate Center, USA</b></p><p>What does a feminist urban theory look like for the twenty first century? This book puts knowledges of feminist urban scholars, feminist scholars of social reproduction, and other urban theorists into conversation to propose an approach to the urban that recognises social reproduction both as foundational to urban transformations and as a methodological entry-point for urban studies. This approach remains intentionally cautious of universal uses of social reproduction theory, instead focusing analytical attention on historical contingency and social difference. The eleven contributions to this volume address distinct elements of contemporary urban crises in social reproduction through the lenses of infrastructure and subjectivity formation as well as through feminist efforts to decolonize urban knowledge production. Collectively, the chapters serve to deepen understandings of how people shape and reshape the spatial forms of their everyday lives, furthering understandings of the ‘infinite variety’ of the urban.
‘Our time is fraught—global, intimate, differentiated—lived at different speeds with different horizons, but its insecurities and possibilities place social reproduction at its heart. This collection creatively and incisively reveals how centering social reproduction as theory and method reshapes the social ontology of the urban. Across sites and scales, an international group of authors offer compelling and original analyses of the material social practices and struggles that make social reproduction such a resonant frame to reimagine and remake urban social life so that it sings with possibility.’<br /><b>Cindi Katz, Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Environmental Psychology at The City University of New York, Graduate Center, USA</b>

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