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E-grāmata: Imagining Urban Complexity: A Humanities Approach in Tropes, Media, and Genres

(Leiden University, Netherlands),
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Imagining Urban Complexity introduces passionate and critical perspectives on the link between humanities and urban studies. It emphasizes tropes, media, and genres as cultural techniques that shape complexity in urban environments by distributing affordances, modes of sensing, and modes of sense-making.

Focusing on urban political and cultural dynamics in 24 global cities, the book shows that urban environments are thematized in literature and art, but are also entities that are shaped, perceived, interpreted, and experienced through sense-making techniques that have long been central to the humanities. These techniques activate a dialectic between urban imaginations and cancellations because tropes, media, and genres are aesthetically and politically powerful: they propel imaginations and open up multiplicities of urban possibilities, they naturalize actualized orders and cancel alternatives. This book moves between close readings of city spaces and more systemic and infrastructural approaches to urban environments, providing tools and strategies that can be adapted and extended to understand urban complexity in different cultural and historical contexts.

The book speaks to global audiences from a continental philosophical tradition. It is aimed for scholars and researchers in the field of the Humanities, Social Sciences, Urban Studies, urban complexity, aesthetics, and politics. It is relevant to graduate or postgraduate students in critical urban studies, urban design, comparative literature, art history, cultural studies, cultural analysis, ecocriticism, citizenship, political theory, and ethics.



Imagining Urban Complexity introduces passionate and critical perspectives on the link between humanities and urban studies. It emphasizes tropes, media, and genres as cultural techniques that shape complexity in urban environments by distributing affordances, modes of sensing, and modes of sense-making.

Preamble

Urban complexities: a humanities toolkit of tropes, media, genres

I

Tropes

1. What holds cities together?

Body Politic - Network - Belt: Hong Kong & Atlanta

2. Cities as paradigms of nature-culture

Jungle - Desert - Garden : Mexico City & Canberra

3. Urban distributions of access

Archive - Labyrinth - Zone: Istanbul & Moscow

4. Cities as centers of expectation and disillusion

Utopia - Dystopia - Non-Place: Paris & Brasilia

II

Media

5. Bringing urban selves and world into perspective

Theatre - Spectacle: Amsterdam & Naples

6. Connecting the private and the masses

Newspaper - Radio: Chicago & Caļro

7. Battlegrounds of representation and motors of desire

Television - Cinema: Beijing & Bangkok

8. Media relating dividuals and scapes

Digital - Social Media: Mumbai & Nairobi

III

Genres

9. Cities as forms of emplotment

Narrative Documentary: Rio de Janeiro & Seattle

10. Urban life fragmented and improvized

Collage Play: Lagos & Barcelona

11. Who does a city address and what do its rhythms express?

Lyric Poetry: Isfahan & Jakarta

12. City secret, city trauma and the unrepresentable

Allegory Comics: Jerusalem & Hiroshima

Postscript

The smart city: archipelagos of tests
Frans-Willem Korsten is professor of Literature, Culture, and Law at the Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society and professor of Literature and Society at the Erasmus School of Philosophy. He was responsible for the Dutch Research Council (NWO) internationalization program "Precarity and Post-Autonomia: The Global Heritage" and took part in the NWO/Research Foundation Flanders (FWO)funded program "Imagineering Techniques in the Early Modern Period." He currently takes part in a program funded by the NWO entitled "Playing Politics: Media Platforms, Making Worlds." He published extensively on the Dutch Republican baroque, theatricality, and sovereignty (A Dutch Republican Baroque; 2017), and on the relation between literature, art, politics, justice, and lawArt as an Interface of Law and Justice: Affirmation, Disturbance, Disruption (2021) and Cultural Interactions: Conflict and Cooperation (2022).

Anthony T. Albright is a PhD candidate and lecturer at the Leiden University Center for the Arts in Society. He received a bachelor of arts (BA) with a concentration in English and Comparative Literature from Columbia University and a master of arts (MA) in Media Studies from Leiden University.