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deterritorialization

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Journal Article
Public Culture (2018) 30 (2): 269–276.
Published: 01 May 2018
... of a capsular cure to the neglect of providing sanatorium care, addressing disease transmission, and curbing drug resistance. In response to Venkat’s essay, Paul Mason and colleagues highlight how a biomedical narrative about tuberculosis became deterritorialized from high-income countries where new...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2010) 22 (3): 425–432.
Published: 01 September 2010
... a major one, minor literature’s first characteristic is the deterritorialization of the language it uses, caused by the problem or the impossibility of using it in a com- mon way.2 Thus the impossibility itself becomes a creative tool that tears minor...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1990) 2 (2): 1–24.
Published: 01 May 1990
... in their new homes, raising anew the problem of reproduction in a deterritorialized context. Detenitorialization, in general, is one of the central forces of the modem world, since it brings laboring populations into the lower-class sectors and spaces of relatively wealthy societies, while sometimes...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2011) 23 (2): 321–330.
Published: 01 May 2011
... the ocean.”1 I start with this premise to suggest that if we read Gandhi’s invented idea of swaraj (self-­rule) as a potentially deterritorialized concept, then perhaps we can apply it to the peculiarities of the inherently deterritorialized case of Portuguese India, Goa being a Portuguese...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1997) 10 (1): 135–167.
Published: 01 January 1997
... such as “the space of flows,” “hyperspace,” “FlexSpace,” “deterritorialization,” “ethnoscapes,” the “local-global interplay,” the “local-global nexus,” and “glocalization” to describe the spatial reorganization of world capi- talism on both sub- and suprastate spatial scales.2 In a world of intensifying global...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2018) 30 (2): 277–282.
Published: 01 May 2018
... had intemperately expended on Rohini, leaving no remainder for his other wives. 4 Here I might briefly mention Mason et al.’s (2018 : 000) statement that “the deterritorialization of antimicrobials from the United States and Europe meant that the biomedical narrative about tuberculosis...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2000) 12 (3): 803–804.
Published: 01 September 2000
... of estrangement, deterritorialization, and a certain uncanny. The norm can become visible, that is, historically specific—shorn of its ethereal glow of universality, plenitude, authenticity, and originality. What are the political implications...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2000) 12 (1): 215–232.
Published: 01 January 2000
... twentieth century: Money, power, and the origins of our times . London:Verso. Basch, Linda, Nina Glick Schiller, and Cristina Szanton Blanc. 1994 . Nations unbound: Transnational projects,postcolonial predicaments, and deterritorialized nation-states . New York: Gordon and Breach. Bhabha, Homi K...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2005) 17 (1): 55–74.
Published: 01 January 2005
... of deterritorialization—understood not as the erasure of place but as one half of the process of decoding and recoding, fi xing and unfi xing, by which surpluses magi- cally appear. The hotel generates surpluses through movements of bodies, com- modities...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1988) 1 (1): 1–4.
Published: 01 January 1988
..., themselves as tourists, television-watchers, immigrants and gastarbeiter, constitute a partially deterritorialized and occasionally counter-cosmopolitan audience whose tastes and knowledge are ever-changing. Thus the founda- tions of the sort of critical theory that emerged from the Frankfurt school...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2006) 18 (2): 413–435.
Published: 01 May 2006
... to the circulation characteristic of deterritorialized images.19 Even though the dis- placement can be understood within the traditional outreach programs developed by the Chilean universities, it is clear that in this case, the name of the State Tech...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1990) 2 (2): 144–147.
Published: 01 May 1990
... with these issues, located throughout the world. The interests of the Center lie in several linked topics: (1) the processes by which cultural expressions have become increasingly deterritorialized, (2) the rapid emergence of cosmopolitan forms - such as cinema, television, museums and tourism - in different...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1993) 5 (2): 179–212.
Published: 01 May 1993
... within these sites and in larger, deterritorialized contexts; the English word “publicity” grasps this sense only in its historically alienated form. In the dialectical tension between these two senses, Negt and Kluge develop their concept of Ojentlichkeit as the “general horizon of social...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1993) 5 (3): 411–429.
Published: 01 September 1993
... the nameless aroma of treason, in respect to the cozy alliance of the Nehrus and Mountbattens, and the bourgeois compact between Gandhian nonviolence and Nehruvian socialism. My father’s distrust of the Nehru dynasty predisposed us to imagine a strange, deterritorialized India, invented in Taiwan...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2005) 17 (2): 203–216.
Published: 01 May 2005
... of black American identity as always exceeding the boundaries of the histories and experiences wherein we expect to situate it, for race and nation “expand, deterritorialize, and move.”20 Souls, for Cooppan, is what Gilles Deleuze and Félix...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2021) 33 (1 (93)): 1–5.
Published: 01 January 2021
... Iberian theologians in the early European incursions into the Caribbean and Latin America, to struggles over the sovereign rights of the East India Company at the margins of the British empire in India, Hansen deterritorializes Europe while making its internal story inseparable from the expansion of its...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2004) 16 (2): 209–238.
Published: 01 May 2004
... Taiwan and China have developed ways of excluding, con- taining, or rechanneling deterritorializing forces such as capitalism (Deleuze and 1. The English word pilgrimage is used to translate the Chinese term jing xiang (literally “pre- senting incense The Chinese term implies that by burning...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2004) 16 (3): 373–405.
Published: 01 September 2004
... be explained by three factors. First, the apartheid state apparatus operated as a “machine” that was both territorial and deterritorializing. A network of exclusive connections and disjunctive inclu- sions, it superposed and juxtaposed a geographic...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2000) 12 (1): 233–257.
Published: 01 January 2000
.... 237 Public Culture stood as a specificity in place, the regional appears to be a terrain “in between,” a geographic reality and a constructed discursivity that is both spatialized in its transnational deterritorialization and yet reterritorialized...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1996) 8 (3): 511–537.
Published: 01 September 1996
... and Guattari delineate three features of a minor literature (1986). The first feature is a “high co-efficient of deterritorialization” (p. 16). Similarly, Morris argues that, “to make a minor use of a major language is to articulate living...