Dreams, Bricks, and Bodies: Mapping ‘Neglected Spatialities’ in African Cape Town
Yonn Dierwechter
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Yonn Dierwechter: Urban Studies Program, University of Washington, Tacoma, 1900 Commerce Street, Tacoma, WA, 98403, USA
Environment and Planning A, 2004, vol. 36, issue 6, 959-981
Abstract:
This paper deploys several propositions from Amin and Thrift's recent theoretical work to map emerging geographies of the postapartheid city. Using Cape Town as a case study, the focus is on urban planning and informal sector retailing. After a discussion of the informal food sector, three parameters of urban space that are often apprehended separately are held together: an imagined geography of planning for the efficient and postapartheid city (‘dreams’); a material geography of marketplaces for the developmental transformation of informal retailing (‘bricks’); and a socioeconomic geography of what local officials call “pre-entrepreneurs†(‘bodies’). The author argues that these three geographical features of the postapartheid city are of an emerging and mutually dependent piece; that is to say, they are cocreating each other across scales and domains of reality. The paper concludes with a brief discussion of the broader implications for understanding the prospects of the postapartheid city.
Date: 2004
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:envira:v:36:y:2004:i:6:p:959-981
DOI: 10.1068/a3688
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