A Feminist Urban Theory for Our Time. Группа авторов

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Название A Feminist Urban Theory for Our Time
Автор произведения Группа авторов
Жанр Социология
Серия
Издательство Социология
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119789178



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wider housing crisis that had not only gendered, but also classed and raced dimensions.’ In Cordoba, the focus shifted from police repression to demand for access to infrastructures of social reproduction in education and healthcare.

       Decolonizing Feminist Urban Knowledge

      Our broad project of advancing a feminist urban theory for our time is predicated on recognizing the need to decolonize feminist knowledge production about the urban, including within this book. Coloniality, or the patterns of power resulting from colonialism that have shaped subjectivities, political and economic power, and knowledge (Maldonado-Torres 2007; Noxolo 2017), brings into view the way in which historical structures of gendered oppression, such as patriarchy and heteronormativity, work in concert with structures of class and racial ordering to shape contemporary urbanization. While postcolonial theory has long analysed how colonial power has shaped knowledge and global systems of economic, political, and cultural ordering emanating from Eurocentric epistemologies, decolonial theory from Latin American and Caribbean perspectives has theorized the relationship between coloniality and modernity, and liberation from coloniality as a political project. Latin American feminist traditions have further sought to critically interrogate decolonial scholarship through a ‘descolonial approach’ (Esguerra Muelle, Ojeda, and Fleischer, Chapter 9), emphasizing the role of gender oppression in colonial power and the need to connect with ongoing anti-colonial movements in Latin America and the Caribbean. At the same time, Indigenous scholars have sought to move beyond postcolonial concerns with representation to emphasize the lived voices and experiences of colonized subjects, particularly in spaces occupied by settler-colonists where Indigenous peoples and Indigenous geographies continue to be subjected to processes of dispossession (de Leeuw and Hunt 2018).

      In Chapter 3, Emily Fedoruk’s analysis of a public mural quoting the words of Qayqayt First Nations Chief, Rhonda Larrabee, in the Vancouver suburb of New Westminster, British Columbia, highlights Indigenous social reproduction amidst ongoing processes of colonial dispossession in settler colonial Canada. Fedoruk situates the social reproduction of the Qayqayt First Nations into the broader context of settler-colonialism, thereby avoiding collapsing the ongoing violence of capitalist settler-colonialism into the violence of contemporary urban capitalism, making it possible to reflect on these different forms of violence relationally and historically. More importantly, by using social reproduction in this methodological way, this chapter directs us beyond social reproduction, towards Indigenous ontologies of life and history. In their exploration of the legacies of plantation economies and neoliberal urban transformation in the Caribbean, Santos Ocasio and Mullings (Chapter 2) discuss the ways in which processes of ‘disaster capitalism’ (Klein 2007) and ‘debt imperialism’ (Kim 2018) shape urban dispossession in the wake of environmental disaster in Haiti and Puerto Rico. They commit to what Frantz Fanon (1961, p. 210) terms ‘passionate research’, in order to seemingly recover ‘beyond the misery of today, beyond self-contempt, resignation and abjuration, to some very beautiful and splendid era whose existence’ provides communities battered by disaster capitalism with the tools to rehabilitate themselves and others. In her chapter on spatial politics in Ramallah, Natasha Aruri (Chapter 8) discusses the confluence of neocolonialism and neoliberal modes of urban development in a context of ongoing militarized settler colonial occupation in Palestine. As a primary vehicle through which finance capital feeds into contemporary urbanization, Aruri tracks the proliferation of speculative capital in the real estate market and its deleterious impact on possibilities for everyday social reproduction in Ramallah.