1st Edition

Urban Assemblages How Actor-Network Theory Changes Urban Studies

Edited By Ignacio Farías, Thomas Bender Copyright 2010
    352 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    352 Pages 18 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book takes it as a given that the city is made of multiple partially localized assemblages built of heterogeneous networks, spaces, and practices. The past century of urban studies has focused on various aspects—space, culture, politics, economy—but these too often address each domain and the city itself as a bounded and cohesive entity. The multiple and overlapping enactments that constitute urban life require a commensurate method of analysis that encompasses the human and non-human aspects of cities—from nature to socio-technical networks, to hybrid collectivities, physical artefacts and historical legacies, and the virtual or imagined city.

    This book proposes—and its various chapters offer demonstrations—importing into urban studies a body of theories, concepts, and perspectives developed in the field of science and technology studies (STS) and, more specifically, Actor-Network Theory (ANT). The essays examine artefacts, technical systems, architectures, place and eventful spaces, the persistence of history, imaginary and virtual elements of city life, and the politics and ethical challenges of a mode of analysis that incorporates multiple actors as hybrid chains of causation. The chapters are attentive to the multiple scales of both the object of analysis and the analysis itself. The aim is more ambitious than the mere transfer of a fashionable template. The authors embrace ANT critically, as much as a metaphor as a method of analysis, deploying it to think with, to ask new questions, to find the language to achieve more compelling descriptions of city life and of urban transformations. By greatly extending the chain or network of causation, proliferating heterogeneous agents, non-human as well as human, without limit as to their enrolment in urban assemblages, Actor-Network Theory offers a way of addressing the particular complexity and openness characteristic of cities.

    By enabling an escape from the reification of the city so common in social theory, ANT’s notion of hybrid assemblages offers richer framing of the reality of the city—of urban experience—that is responsive to contingency and complexity. Therefore Urban Assemblages is a pertinent book for students, practitioners and scholars as it aims to shift the parameters of urban studies and contribute a meaningful argument for the urban arena which will dominate the coming decades in government policies.

    Introduction (Ignacio Farías)  Section I: Towards a Flat Ontology?  1. Gelleable Spaces, Eventful Geographies: the Case of Santiago's Experimental Music Scene (Manuel Tironi)  2. Globalizations Big and Small: Notes on Urban Studies, Actor-network Theory, and Geographical Scale (Alan Latham and Derek McCormack)  3. Urban Studies without ‘scale’: Localizing the Global Through Singapore (Richard G. Smith)  4. Assembling Asturias: Scaling Devices and Cultural Leverage (Don Slater and Tomas Ariztía)  Interview with Nigel Thrift (Ignacio Farías)  Section 2: A Non-Human Urban Ecology  5. How do we Co-Produce Urban Transport Systems and the City? The Case of Transmilenio and Bogotá (Andrés Valderrama Pineda)  6. Changing Obdurate Urban Objects: The Attempts to Reconstruct the Highway through Maastricht (Anique Hommels)  7. Mutable Immobiles. Building Conversion as a Problem of Quasi-Technologies (Michael Guggenheim)  8. Conviction and Commotion: On Soundspheres, Technopolitics and Urban Space (Israel Rodríguez Giralt, Daniel López Gómez and Noel García López)  Interview with Stephen Graham (Ignacio Farías)  Section 3: The Multiple City  9. The Reality of Urban Tourism: Framed Activity and Virtual Ontology (Ignacio Farías)  10. Assembling Money and the Senses. Revisiting Georg Simmel and the City (Michael Schillmeier)  11. The City as Value Locus: Markets, Technologies, and the Problem of Worth (Caitlin Zaloom)  12. Second Empire, Second Nature, Secondary World: Verne and Baudelaire in the Capital of the Nineteenth Century (Rosalind Williams)  Interview with Robert Shields (Ignacio Farías)  Postscript: Re-Assembling the City. Networks and Urban Imaginaries (Thomas Bender)

    Biography

    Thomas Bender is University Professor and Professor of History at New York University. He is a historian of the United States. His books include Toward an Urban Vision, The Unfinished City and he has coedited Urban Imaginaries. He also writes on urban design and development issues for various publications, including The New York Times and the Harvard Design Magazine

    Ignacio Faras holds a PhD in European Anthropology of the Humboldt University of Berlin, is Senior Research Fellow of the Social Science Research Center Berlin and Associate Researcher at the Diego Portales University in Santiago de Chile. His main research topics include social and cultural theory, cultural urban studies, economic sociology and anthropology of tourism