断裂的空间与空间疏离:加德满都公共空间的(去)制造

Ruptured space and spatial estrangement: (Un)making of public space in Kathmandu

Urban Studies · 2017
被引 10
ABS 3

中文导读

研究了加德满都的Tundikhel公共空间如何因制度化、军事化和非正式化三种权力模式而经历物理与象征的碎片化,导致空间疏离,揭示了国家公共性议程中的虚伪性。

Abstract

Public space is increasingly recognised to be central to spatial discourse of cities. A city’s urbanism is displayed in public spaces, representing a myriad of complex socio-cultural, economic and democratic practices of everyday life. In cities of the Global South, especially those with nascent democracies, different values attached to a space by various actors – both material and symbolic – frame the contestation, making the physical space a normative instrument for contestation. Tundikhel, once believed to be the largest open space in Asia, is an important part of Kathmandu’s urbanism, which has witnessed two civil wars popularly known as Jana Andolans, and the subsequent political upheavals, to emerge as the symbolic meeting point of the city, democracy, and its people. The paper argues that the confluence of the three modalities of power – institutionalisation, militarisation and informalisation – has underpinned its historical transformation, resulting in what I call ‘urban rupturing’: a process of (un)making of public space, through physical and symbolic fragmentation and spatial estrangement. The paper contends that unlike the common notion that public spaces such as Tundikhel are quintessentially public, hypocrisy is inherent to the ‘publicness’ agenda of the state and the institutional machinery in Kathmandu. It is an urban condition that not only maligns the public space agenda but also creeps into other spheres of urban development.

城市研究公共空间政治地理南亚研究城市社会学