Since the 1980s a great deal has been written on the
relationship between art, architecture, and urban planning and
design, on the one hand, and the politics of space on the other. In
Evictions Rosalyn Deutsche investigates -- and protests against --
the dominant uses of this interdisciplinary discourse.Deutsche
argues that critics on both the left and the right invoke
harmonious images of space that conceal and justify exclusions --
whether the space in question is a city, park, institution,
exhibition, identity, or work of art. By contrast, she calls for a
democratic spatial critique that takes account of the conflicts
that produce and maintain all spaces, including the space of
politics itself.Evictions examines how aesthetic and urban
ideologies were combined during the last decade to legitimize urban
redevelopment programs that claimed to be beneficial to all, yet in
reality tried to expunge traditional working classes from the city.
Combining critical aesthetic theory about the social production of
art with critical urban theory about the social production of
space, Deutsche exposes this unspoken agenda. She then responds to
a new alliance of prominent urban and cultural scholars who use
critical spatial theory to protect traditional left political
projects against the challenges posed by new radical cultural
practices.In her critique, Deutsche mobilizes feminist and
postmodern ideas about the politics of visual representation and
subjectivity. She also intervenes in debates taking place in art,
architecture, and urban studies about the meaning of public space,
and places these struggles within broader contests over the
definition of democracy. Opposing the nostalgic belief that
democracy's survival demands the recovery of a once unified public
sphere, Deutsche contends that conflict, far from undermining
public space, is a prerequisite for its existence and
growth.CONTENTS: Introduction. I. The Social Production of Space.
Krzysztof Wodiczko's Homeless Projection and the Site of Urban
"Revitalization." Uneven Development: Public Art in New York City.
Representing Berlin: Urban Ideology and Aesthetic Practice.
Property Values: Hans Haacke, Real Estate, and the Museum. II. Men
in Space. Men in Space. Boys Town. Chinatown, Part Four? What Jake
Forgets about Downtown. III. Public Space and Democracy. Tilted Arc
and the Uses of Democracy. Agoraphobia.
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