1st Edition

Film and Urbanism

Edited By Gihan Karunaratne Copyright 2027
372 Pages 82 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Film and Urbanism contributes to interdisciplinary scholarship by investigating the complex and multidimensional relationship between the city and film as a practice. Moving beyond the idea of a recording and representation method alone, film is approached here as a critical spatial practice that contains elements of design, with a capacity to reveal, interrogate and interact with the shifting... Read more

Introduction

Gihan Karunaratne

SECTION 1: Space of Flows and Geopolitics of the Personal.

1. Should the Wind Drop: Itineraries of the Non-Place.

Floris Paalman, Jiamai Chen (University of Amsterdam)

2. Dancing through Berlin: Historical and Urban Layers in “Oh Boy’.

Andreas Hamburger, Veronika Heller (IPU Berlin)

3. Bit-Part to Beating Heart: Mapping Trans Geographies on Screen.

Gem Barton, Gaetano Drago (Royal College of Art, London)

SECTION 2: Luminous Geographies of Inequalities and Redemption.

4. All we imagine as light: The Plight of the Temporary Migrant Workers of Colombo.

Gihan Karunaratne, Jagath Munasinghe (University of Moratuwa), Nusrat Jahan Mim (Toronto University)

5. Framing the Analogistic Clutter: Towards a Warburgian Cinematic Atlas of Tehran and Mumbai.

Hamideh Farahmandian, Ronita Bardhan, François Penz (Cambridge University)

6. Cinematic Informality: Migrant Urban Life Between Representation and Lived

Space.

Abel Mavura, Felipe Hernandez (Cambridge University)

7. The Harder They Come: Narratives of Resilience and Redemption in Urban Jamaica. David Howard (University of Oxford)

SECTION 3: Lenses of Recognition, Exposure and Consequence.

8. Projected Cities and Cinematic Futures: Urban Imaginaries, Post-Urbanism, and the Architecture of Film.

Tigran Haas (KTH Royal Institute of Technology)

9. The light-hearted spirit of Jean Rouch’s approach to the city.

Alvaro Velasco Perez (Architectural Association)

10. War-ravaged cities—(not) a movie set.

Fabienne Hoelzel (Stuttgart State Academy of Art and Design)

SECTION 4: Cine-sites of Traits, Debts, Narratives and Identities.

11. Film-Making and Urban Identity Formation: In Creating the Place of Significance in Mind.

Ali Cheshmehzangi (University of Queensland & Hunan University, China)

12. The Great Cities of Becoming from Literary New York to Cinematic Berlin.

Gul Kacmaz Erk (Queen's University Belfast)

13. Spatializing debt: Film narratives as Project hypotheses.

Antonio Di Campli (Politecnico di Torino)

SECTION 5: Liminal Pedagogies and Lifecycles of Film-City-making.

14. When The City Teaches the Camera.

Klearjos Eduardo Papanicolaou and Michael Walczak (ETH Zurich)

15. The Camera Room: Filmmaking as Spatial Practice.

Clara Kraft Isono (Columbia University/ Harvard University)

16. It’s About Time: The Architectural Essay Film as a Pedagogical Tool.

Penelope Haralambidou (The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL)

SECTION 6: Filmic Bodies, Displaced Matter and Sensorial Environments.

17. Cities of Pores and Holes: Displaced Waters in the Migratory Cinemas of East and Southeast Asia.

Doreen Bernath (Architectural Association)

18. Nostalgia, Scentscapes, and Urban Resilience: Cinematic Explorations of Memory in the City.

Azadeh Fatehrad

19. From the Sea to the Square: Filming the improvised choreography of a drawing. Angeliki Sakellariou

20. Materials at the Edge: Framing Identity in Film and Urban Interiors.

Tania Lopez-Winkler (Royal College of Art, London)

Biography

Gihan Karunaratne is an architect and academic whose work critically engages with current questions in architecture, urbanism, and spatial practice. Informed by extensive experience in both teaching and professional practice, his approach operates at the intersection of design inquiry, urban theory, and socio-spatial research. His academic trajectory reflects a sustained commitment to examining the dynamic, evolving nature of urban environments, particularly in contexts shaped by ongoing physical, economic, and social transformation. Karunaratne’s research interrogates the complex processes through which urban change unfolds, and the ways these transformations intersect with the everyday lived experiences of marginalised communities. His work foregrounds often overlooked dimensions of urban life, the “underbelly” of cities, by drawing critical attention to informal settlements and conditions of precarity. Through this lens, he engages with questions of resilience, spatial justice, and the adaptive practices that emerge in uncertain, rapidly shifting urban contexts. A significant dimension of his research focuses on cities in the Global South, where rapid urbanisation, socio-economic inequality, and displacement generate distinctive spatial conditions. Within this framework, informal urbanism is understood not as a deficit, but as a complex terrain of social and spatial negotiation. His publications contribute to interdisciplinary debates on urban transformation, informality, and spatial justice, advancing critical perspectives on architecture, resilience, and the politics of urban space.