Streets in motion: the making of infrastructure, property, and political culture in twentieth-century Calcutta
Series: Metamorphoses of the political: multidisciplinary approachesPublication details: Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2022.Description: xiv, 305p.: hbk: 24cmISBN:- 9781009100113
- 307.12160954147 BAN
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | IIT Gandhinagar | General | 307.12160954147 BAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 033178 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
The book studies the social production of motion in a capitalist urban context. In the city of capital, motion refers to a fetish. The bourgeois order posits motion as a metaphor for energy, positivity, and progress – a norm – and obstruction (motion's dialectical opposite) as delinquency. The book uncovers the social tectonics of spatial mobilization and thus demystifies motion. Who and what set spaces on the move? How did various classes of city dwellers activate, experience, and negotiate it? Streets in Motion develops an approach to urban history by theorizing and historicizing the 'street' as an apparatus of city-making and subject formation. It works at two registers – a local history of Calcutta in colonial and post-colonial periods, and a theorizing of the logistical and political-cultural centrality of the street within this rubric. It is argued that the street is politics in as much as politics is the production of space.
-Introduces a new dialectical opposition between motion and obstruction and thus it re-articulates Marxism in urban history
Connects Calcutta's late-colonial histories with its postcolonial developments
-Introduces two new archives to the public - The Archives of the Calcutta Improvement Trust and the Hawker Sangram Committee
https://www.cambridge.org/in/universitypress/subjects/politics-international-relations/political-economy/streets-motion-making-infrastructure-property-and-political-culture-twentieth-century-calcutta?format=HB
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