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City Living - How Urban Spaces and Urban Dwellers Make One Another (Hardcover)
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City Living - How Urban Spaces and Urban Dwellers Make One Another (Hardcover)
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City Living is about urban spaces, urban dwellers, and how these
spaces and people make, shape, and change one another. More people
live in cities than ever before: more than 50% of the earth's
people are urban dwellers. As downtown cores gentrify and
globalize, they are becoming more diverse than ever, along lines of
race, ethnicity, socioeconomic class, sexuality, and age.
Meanwhile, we are in the early stages of what seems sure to be a
period of intense civil unrest. During such periods, cities
generally become the primary sites where tensions and resistance
are concentrated, negotiated, and performed. For all of these
reasons, understanding cities and contemporary city living is
pressing and exciting from almost any disciplinary and political
perspective. Quill R Kukla offers the first systematic
philosophical investigation of the nature of city life and city
dwellers. The book draws on empirical and ethnographic work in
geography, anthropology, urban planning, and several other
disciplines in order to explore the impact that cities have on
their dwellers and that dwellers have on their cities. It begins
with a philosophical exploration of spatially embodied agency and
of the specific forms of agency and spatiality that are distinctive
of urban life. It explores how gentrification is enacted and
experienced at the level of embodied agency, arguing that
gentrifying spaces are contested territories that shape and are
shaped by their dwellers. The book then moves to an exploration of
repurposed cities, which are cities materially designed to support
one sociopolitical order, but in which that order collapsed,
leaving new dwellers to use the space in new ways. Through detailed
original ethnography of the repurposed cities of Berlin and
Johannesburg, Kukla makes the case that in repurposed cities, we
can see vividly how material spaces shape and constrain the agency
and experience of dwellers, while dwellers creatively shape the
spaces they inhabit in accordance with their needs. The book
concludes with a reconsideration of the right to the city, asking
what would be involved in creating a city that enabled the agency
and flourishing of all its diverse inhabitants.
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