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City Of Extremes The Spatial Politics Of Johannesburg First Edition Martin J Murray

  • SKU: BELL-5090216
City Of Extremes The Spatial Politics Of Johannesburg First Edition Martin J Murray
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City Of Extremes The Spatial Politics Of Johannesburg First Edition Martin J Murray instant download after payment.

Publisher: Duke University Press Books
File Extension: PDF
File size: 44.19 MB
Pages: 464
Author: Martin J. Murray
ISBN: 9780822347682, 0822347687
Language: English
Year: 2011
Edition: First Edition

Product desciption

City Of Extremes The Spatial Politics Of Johannesburg First Edition Martin J Murray by Martin J. Murray 9780822347682, 0822347687 instant download after payment.

City of Extremes is a powerful critique of urban development in greater Johannesburg since the end of apartheid in 1994. Martin J. Murray describes how a loose alliance of city builders—including real estate developers, large-scale property owners, municipal officials, and security specialists—has sought to remake Johannesburg in the upbeat image of a world-class city. By creating new sites of sequestered luxury catering to the comfort, safety, and security of affluent urban residents, they have produced a new spatial dynamic of social exclusion, effectively barricading the mostly black urban poor from full participation in the mainstream of urban life. This partitioning of the cityscape is enabled by an urban planning environment of limited regulation or intervention into the prerogatives of real estate capital.

Combining insights from urban studies, cultural geography, and urban sociology with extensive research in South Africa, Murray reflects on the implications of Johannesburg’s dual character as a city of fortified enclaves that proudly displays the ostentatious symbols of global integration and the celebrated “enterprise culture” of neoliberal design, and as the “miasmal city” composed of residual, peripheral, and stigmatized zones characterized by signs of a new kind of marginality. He suggests that the “global cities” paradigm is inadequate to understanding the historical specificity of cities in the Global South, including the colonial mining town turned postcolonial megacity of Johannesburg.

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