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Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (3 (98)): 385–392.
Published: 01 September 2022
... enclaves and the people that inhabit them as anachronistic residues against deep genealogies of racial capitalism and of the rhetorical tropes that sustained them. Carceral-like containment and, more generally, spatial segregation are shown to run through and thus be foundational in the history...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1996) 8 (2): 303–328.
Published: 01 May 1996
... , Teresa Pires do Rio . n.d.b. “Building up walls: The new pattern of spatial segregation in Sâo Paulo.” International Social Science Journal (forthcoming). Calderia , Teresa Pires do Rio . 1984. A Política dos Outros. Sâo Paulo: Brasiliense. Caldeira , Teresa , and James Holston...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2009) 21 (2): 403–430.
Published: 01 May 2009
... space and inhabited time. Operating as a neo-orientalist simulacrum, such projects subvert, spatially and semiotically, the standard logic of urban representation and modernistic notions of segregation. The concept of spatial heteronomy is proposed to address such dialectic strategies of spatial...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2002) 14 (2): 311–334.
Published: 01 May 2002
... and segregation in urban Brazil, Teresa Caldeira (2000) also demonstrates how social inequality is both produced and inscribed in patterns of spatial segregation—as newly created, in this case, through the emergence of fortified residential enclaves...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2013) 25 (2 70): 209–221.
Published: 01 March 2013
... of further developing cityness — either this or spatial segregations that deurbanize a city. It is worth noting that when it all succeeds, such cities actually enable a kind of peaceful coexistence for long stretches of time. Coexistence does...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2018) 30 (2): 199–220.
Published: 01 May 2018
... and thus undermines, even if very gradually, the biospatial link and the construction of space as Jewish. The strict segregation in the West Bank does not allow for such “spatial miscegenation” processes. Indeed, the settlements in the West Bank consist of Jews only. Israel’s obsession with demography...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2004) 16 (3): 373–405.
Published: 01 September 2004
... subjects. Deeply marked by a tremendous fear of life and used to resorting to shortcuts, they developed an extraordinary capac- ity to live in a world of prearranged impasses and untenable lies.41 From a spatial point of view, the apartheid...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2004) 16 (3): 521–531.
Published: 01 September 2004
... neighborhoods—Charter Square, Mandelaville, Chris Hani, Swaziland, Tamatievlei (Tomato Marsh), Geel Kamers (Yellow Rooms)—its superimposed spatial stories about political affiliations, kin- ship networks, places of origin, and landscape features...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1997) 10 (1): 83–113.
Published: 01 January 1997
.... 87 Public Culture Official and Unofficial Forms of the Common Interestingly, however, Calcutta did not follow the logic of spatial segregation seen in some early modern European cities. The native parts of the city inter- mixed...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2004) 16 (3): 347–372.
Published: 01 September 2004
.... First is a long tradition of urban inquiry that focuses on the spatial dislocation, the class differentiation, and the racial polarization imprinted on the urban land- scape by apartheid state-sanctioned segregation and planning.23...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2013) 25 (2 70): 349–367.
Published: 01 March 2013
... Town, and Cairo — presents a conundrum for both urban professionals and urban scholars that requires a reframing of the questions surrounding their spatial, social, and temporal dynamics. In fact, the planning and urban design professions seem to have lost the ability to conceptualize...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2010) 22 (3): 425–432.
Published: 01 September 2010
.... The hierarchy that enables a complete segregation of the individual from the collective in the passage from public space into private and vice versa is abolished. Rather, a spatial relationship is created in which no clear boundary can...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (3 (77)): 513–532.
Published: 01 September 2015
... though it was extremely harmful to women, who were blamed for transmitting clap to men. A state power structure was mobilized to deal with these diseases by stigmatizing selective groups, by spatially segregating them, by refusing to assess how the disease was actually being transmitted by men as well...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2012) 24 (2 (67)): 385–419.
Published: 01 May 2012
... modus vivendi according to which social and spatial inequalities were reproduced without being confronted directly. 1. Autoconstruction refers to the process through which people build their own houses in lots that they acquire in the urbanizing peripheries of large Brazilian cities. Two...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2014) 26 (1 (72)): 153–185.
Published: 01 January 2014
... — and a Syriac spatial practice of urbanism that has commissioned material difference. If the “from above” is typically assumed to be the plans and practices of professionals, and the “from below” is usually portrayed as grassroots activism with no lasting physical effects, I investigate how Syriac buildings...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2002) 14 (1): 173–190.
Published: 01 January 2002
... explain this process of interpenetration and dialogical relation. The public visibility of Islam and the specific gender, cor- poreal, and spatial practices underpinning it trigger new ways of imagining a col- lective self and common space...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2019) 31 (2): 197–214.
Published: 01 May 2019
... have given way to the need to redress inequality as formal policy. And yet, many argue that political economic inequality has not been adequately addressed in the governmental language of “broad-based Black economic empowerment.” Economic differentiation and spatial segregation persist. The most elite...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2011) 23 (1): 201–215.
Published: 01 January 2011
... by security discourse resting on postcolonial spatial segregation.13 Beyond their divergences, all three authors agree on the view that postcolonial studies has eventually taken root in France, and they situate it with the advent of the new...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2022) 34 (1 (96)): 99–121.
Published: 01 January 2022
... dispersing into the city's outlying districts and infrastructures. We were struck by the uniquely spatial character of the movement, and its economic impacts, as well as by impassioned attachments to ideas of democracy and its freedoms that seemed, to us, undefined. Our argument begins by contextualizing...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1997) 10 (1): 24–60.
Published: 01 January 1997
... . Ecrits: A Selection . Trans. A. Sheridan. New York: Norton, 1977 . Marx , Karl . Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 . Trans. M. Milligran. Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1974 . Massey , Doreen . Spatial Divison of Labour: Social Structures and the Geography of Production...