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The Urban Enigma: Time, Autonomy, and Postcolonial Transformations in Latin America

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Urban Enigma: Time, Autonomy, and Postcolonial Transformations in Latin America

Contributors:

By (Author) Simone Vegli

ISBN:

9781786613899

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Rowman & Littlefield International

Publication Date:

15th July 2020

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Politics and government
Social and political philosophy
Urban communities / city life

Dewey:

307.76098

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

198

Dimensions:

Width 155mm, Height 230mm, Spine 11mm

Weight:

277g

Description

The book explores how Latin America indicated an autonomous form of postcolonialism that was marked by the production of multiple conceptualisations of time. The analysis particularly focuses on iconic urban transformations in capital cities such as Buenos Aires, Mexico City, and Brasilia, diachronically, and investigates each cases specific representations of past, present, and future. By exploring these three episodes, the book shows how Latin Americas postcolonialism involved specific spatial dynamics that were inherently working over global socio-political geographies resulting from the legacy of a long colonial imagination. The text is divided into two parts.

The first part discusses some theoretical questions concerning the very conceptualization of Latin American space and the importance of exploring a genealogy of its urban geographies. The second part analyses the themes proposed through the discussion of the materiality of specific historical examples. The section delves into urban transformations in the aforementioned capital cities and focuses on how iconic material forms are able to encapsulate the main socio-political features defining each countrys post-colonial project.

The book aims to depict a historical geography capable of describing how controversial relations between power and knowledge had materialised in the shapes of the urban environment and had iconically contributed to the multifaceted production of the global area known as Latin America. Without any pretension to offer an all-embracing perspective, the book dis-cusses the Latin America experience within the broader question concerning the genealogy of global socio-political geographies.

Author Bio

Simone Vegli is a PhD Researcher in Geography at Kings College London.

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