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-65%Giving Groundâ
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$7.00The Story
Giving Ground is prompted by two phenomena whose paradoxical convergence is currently altering our experience and conception of urban relations and city planning. On the one hand, forces of globalisation push towards conditions of homogenisation and deterritorialisation, while, on the other, a surging politics of identity barricades various groups behind particular claims and ignites violent persecutions. The covert relation between these phenomena, wherby territory/ground is both disavowed or abstracted and jealously reclaimed, is the focus of the essays in this volume, at the heart of these investigations are the notions of propinquity and neighbourliness whose redefinitions and redeployments serve widely divergent ends: from the fortification of the ânew urbanistâ fantasy about the possibility of re-creating small towns, to the validation of the exclusionary tactics of âsanitizationâ that guide zoning decisions, to assisting in the reimagination of an ethical and reasonable urbanism. Directed against the contracting limits of tolerance, this volume attempts to reinvent the troubled notion of the âright to the cityâ.
The individual contributions range from examinations of the crises in specific citiesâJerusalem, New York, and the network of âglobal citiesâ throughout the worldâto considerations of specific urban issues, such as the physical instrumentalities by which people a brought into physical proximity and the implementation of ânew urbanistâ projects; and reworkings of physical concepts, such as Levinaâs notion of the face-to-face, Lacanâs notion of sublimation, in urbanist terms. Several focus on the relation between cities and sexuality, which figures, for different reasons, as the âeternal ironyâ of urbanity.
The individual contributions range from examinations of the crises in specific citiesâJerusalem, New York, and the network of âglobal citiesâ throughout the worldâto considerations of specific urban issues, such as the physical instrumentalities by which people a brought into physical proximity and the implementation of ânew urbanistâ projects; and reworkings of physical concepts, such as Levinaâs notion of the face-to-face, Lacanâs notion of sublimation, in urbanist terms. Several focus on the relation between cities and sexuality, which figures, for different reasons, as the âeternal ironyâ of urbanity.
Description
Giving Ground is prompted by two phenomena whose paradoxical convergence is currently altering our experience and conception of urban relations and city planning. On the one hand, forces of globalisation push towards conditions of homogenisation and deterritorialisation, while, on the other, a surging politics of identity barricades various groups behind particular claims and ignites violent persecutions. The covert relation between these phenomena, wherby territory/ground is both disavowed or abstracted and jealously reclaimed, is the focus of the essays in this volume, at the heart of these investigations are the notions of propinquity and neighbourliness whose redefinitions and redeployments serve widely divergent ends: from the fortification of the ânew urbanistâ fantasy about the possibility of re-creating small towns, to the validation of the exclusionary tactics of âsanitizationâ that guide zoning decisions, to assisting in the reimagination of an ethical and reasonable urbanism. Directed against the contracting limits of tolerance, this volume attempts to reinvent the troubled notion of the âright to the cityâ.
The individual contributions range from examinations of the crises in specific citiesâJerusalem, New York, and the network of âglobal citiesâ throughout the worldâto considerations of specific urban issues, such as the physical instrumentalities by which people a brought into physical proximity and the implementation of ânew urbanistâ projects; and reworkings of physical concepts, such as Levinaâs notion of the face-to-face, Lacanâs notion of sublimation, in urbanist terms. Several focus on the relation between cities and sexuality, which figures, for different reasons, as the âeternal ironyâ of urbanity.
The individual contributions range from examinations of the crises in specific citiesâJerusalem, New York, and the network of âglobal citiesâ throughout the worldâto considerations of specific urban issues, such as the physical instrumentalities by which people a brought into physical proximity and the implementation of ânew urbanistâ projects; and reworkings of physical concepts, such as Levinaâs notion of the face-to-face, Lacanâs notion of sublimation, in urbanist terms. Several focus on the relation between cities and sexuality, which figures, for different reasons, as the âeternal ironyâ of urbanity.