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Streets in Motion: The Making of Infrastructure, Property, and Political Culture in Twentieth-century Calcutta [Hardback]

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It develops an approach to urban history by theorizing and historicizing the 'street' as an apparatus of city-making and subject formation. It works at two registers – a local history of Calcutta in colonial and post-colonial periods, and a theorizing of the logistical and political-cultural centrality of the street within this rubric.

The book studies the social production of motion in a capitalist urban context. In the city of capital, motion refers to a fetish. The bourgeois order posits motion as a metaphor for energy, positivity, and progress – a norm – and obstruction (motion's dialectical opposite) as delinquency. The book uncovers the social tectonics of spatial mobilization and thus demystifies motion. Who and what set spaces on the move? How did various classes of city dwellers activate, experience, and negotiate it? Streets in Motion develops an approach to urban history by theorizing and historicizing the 'street' as an apparatus of city-making and subject formation. It works at two registers – a local history of Calcutta in colonial and post-colonial periods, and a theorizing of the logistical and political-cultural centrality of the street within this rubric. It is argued that the street is politics in as much as politics is the production of space.

Papildus informācija

Studies Calcutta's 20th century features through the dialectic of motion and obstruction, analysing how space and polity shaped each other.
List of Maps, Tables, Appendices, and Images
vii
List of Abbreviations
ix
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction 1(35)
1 The Making of the Modern Street: Engineers, Commoners, Agitators
36(37)
2 The Regime of the Streets: Renewal and Riots, 1910--1926
73(46)
3 City as Territory: Institutionalizing Majoritarianism
119(39)
4 Frontier Urbanization
158(46)
5 Durable Obstructions, Spatializing Motion: The History of Footpath Hawking in Calcutta
204(50)
Epilogue 254(14)
Glossary 268(3)
Bibliography 271(18)
Index 289
Ritajyoti Bandyopadhyay teaches History and Political Economy at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Mohali. He is also a permanent module fellow of the M.S. Merian R. Tagore International Centre of Advanced Studies 'Metamorphoses of the Political'. Currently, he is a guest professor at the Centre for Modern Indian Studies, Universität Göttingen.