Contained in:
Book Chapter

Peripheries

  • Giuseppina Forte

Peripheries are processes and places in which conditions and actors constantly shift. The contingent forms of peripheries in this book are assembled around embodied identities and are rooted in specific genealogies: peripheries as urban fringes, periphery countries in the modern world-system theory, and peripheral urbanization. Through these genealogies, the heterogeneous forms of peripheries acquire layered meanings that decenter urban theory. Since no form can exist outside historical relations of power, it is critical to apply methodological approaches that can address the political agency emerging from embodied identities.

  • Keywords:
  • peripheries,
  • urban inequality,
  • modern world-system,
  • peripheral urbanization,
  • urban fringes,
  • cityness,
  • worlding,
  • coloniality,
+ Show More

Giuseppina Forte

University of California Berkeley, United States - ORCID: 0000-0003-1330-0216

  1. Akar H.B. 2018, For the War Yet to Come, Stanford University Press.
  2. Amin A., Graham S. 1997, “The ordinary city,” Transactions of the institute of British geographers, 22(4), pp. 411–429.
  3. Amin S. 1997, Capitalism in the age of globalization: The management of contemporary society, Zed Books.
  4. Angelo H., Goh K. 2020, “Out in space: Difference and abstraction in planetary urbanization,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 45(4), pp. 732–744.
  5. Anzaldúa G. 1987, Borderlands/La frontera, Aunt lute.
  6. Balibar E. 2007, “Uprisings in the Banlieues,” Constellations, 14(1), pp. 47–71.
  7. Bambirra V. 1983, Teoría de la dependencia: una anticrítica, Popular Era.
  8. Barone A.C.C. 2013, “Periferia como questão: São Paulo na década de 1970,” Pós. Revista do Programa de Pós-Graduação em Arquitetura e Urbanismo da FAUUSP, 20(33), pp. 64–85.
  9. Bayat A. 2007, “Radical religion and the habitus of the dispossessed: Does Islamic militancy have an urban ecology?” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 31(3), pp. 579–590.
  10. Bhan G. 2016, In the public’s interest: Evictions, citizenship, and inequality in contemporary Delhi, University of Georgia Press.
  11. Bhan G. 2017, Paper presented at “Ten years of global metropolitan studies at Berkeley: A symposium,” University of California, Berkeley, April 2017.
  12. Bhan G. 2019, “Notes on a southern urban practice,” Environment and Urbanization 31(2), pp. 639–654.
  13. Bhan G., Caldeira T., Gillespie K., Simone A. 2020, “The pandemic, southern urbanisms and collective life,” Society and Space, 3.
  14. Bonduki N., Rolnik R. 1982, “Periferia da Grande São Paulo: Reprodução do Espaço como Expediente de Reprodução da Força de Trabalho,” in E. Maricato (ed.), A produção capitalista da casa (e da cidade) no Brasil industrial, Alfa-Ômega, pp. 117–154.
  15. Brenner N. 2014, “Introduction: Urban theory without an outside,” in Implosions/Explosions: Towards a study of planetary urbanization, Jovis, pp. 14–33.
  16. Brenner N., Schmid C. 2015, “Towards a new epistemology of the urban,” City, 19(2-3), pp. 151–182.
  17. Butler J., Athanasiou A. 2013, Dispossession: The performative in the political, Polity Press.
  18. Caldeira T.P. 2009, Opening remarks at the conference, “Peripheries: Decentering urban theory,” University of California, Berkeley, February 2009.
  19. Caldeira T.P. 2017, “Peripheral urbanization: Autoconstruction, transversal logics, and politics in cities of the global south,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 35(1), pp. 3–20.
  20. Cardoso F.H., Faletto E. 1979, Dependency and development in Latin America, University of California Press.
  21. Castells M. 1973, Imperialismo y urbanización en América Latina, Gustavo Gili.
  22. Chakrabarty D. 2000, “Subaltern studies and postcolonial historiography,” Nepantla: Views from South, 1(1), pp. 9–32.
  23. Chatterjee P. 2004, The politics of the governed: Reflections on popular politics in most of the world, Columbia University Press.
  24. Comaroff J., Comaroff J.L. 2015, Theory from the South: Or, how Euro-America is evolving toward Africa, Routledge.
  25. Davis M. 2006, Planet of Slums, Verso.
  26. De Boeck F., Baloji S. 2016, Suturing the city. Living together in Congo’s urban worlds, Autograph ABP.
  27. De Satgé R., Watson. V. 2018, Urban planning in the global south: Conflicting rationalities in contested urban space, Springer.
  28. Dos Santos T. 1970, “The structure of dependence,” The American Economic Review, 60(2), pp. 231–236.
  29. Foucault M. 1984, “Polemics, politics and problematizations,” in P. Rabinow (ed.), The Foucault Reader, Pantheon Books, pp. 381–390.
  30. Frank A.G. 1966, “The development of underdevelopment,” Monthly Review, 18(4).
  31. Goldfrank W.L. 2000, “Paradigm regained? The rules of Wallerstein’s world-system method,” Journal of World-Systems Research, pp. 150–195.
  32. Gramsci A. 2016, Scritti politici, PGreco.
  33. Guha R. 1988, “Preface,” in R. Guha, G.C. Spivak, Selected subaltern studies, Oxford University Press.
  34. Günel G., Varma S., Watanabe C. 2020, “A manifesto for patchwork ethnography,” Member Voices, Fieldsights, 9.
  35. Guney K.M., Keil R., Ucoglu M. (eds.) 2019, Massive suburbanization: (Re)building the global periphery, University of Toronto Press.
  36. Harris R., Vorms C. (eds.) 2017, What’s in a name? Talking about urban peripheries, University of Toronto Press.
  37. Herzog L. 2014, Global suburbs: Urban sprawl from the Rio Grande to Rio de Janeiro, Routledge.
  38. Hesse B. 2014, “Escaping liberty: Western hegemony, black fugitivity,” Political Theory, 42(3), pp. 288–313.
  39. Holston J. 2009, “Insurgent citizenship in an era of global urban peripheries,” City & Society, 21(2), pp. 245–267.
  40. Hoselitz B.F. 1960, Sociological aspects in economic growth, Free Press.
  41. Jeffrey C. 2009, “Fixing futures: Educated unemployment through a north Indian lens,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 51(1), pp. 182–211.
  42. Keil R. 2018, “The empty shell of the planetary: Re-rooting the urban in the experience of the urbanites,” Urban Geography, 39(10), pp. 1589–1602.
  43. Lancione M., McFarlane C. (eds.) 2021, Global urbanism: Knowledge, power and the city, Routledge.
  44. Lefebvre H. 1968, Le droit à la ville, Anthropos.
  45. Lerner D. 1958, The passing of traditional society: Modernizing the Middle East, Free Press.
  46. Lugones M. 2007, “Heterosexualism and the colonial/modern gender system,” Hypatia, 22(1), pp. 186–219.
  47. Lugones M. 2016, “The coloniality of gender,” in W. Harcourt (ed.), The Palgrave handbook of gender and development, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 13–33.
  48. Mahmood S. 2005, Politics of piety: The Islamic revival and the feminist subject, Princeton University Press.
  49. Maricato E. 1996, Metrópole na periferia do capitalismo: Ilegalidade, desigualdade e violência, Editora Hucitec.
  50. Marques E.C., Torres H. (eds.) 2004, São Paulo: Segregação, pobreza e desigualdades sociais, Senac.
  51. Mbembe A. 2004, “Writing the world from an African metropolis,” Public Culture, 16(3), pp. 347–372.
  52. McElroy E., Werth A. 2019, “Deracinated dispossessions: On the foreclosures of ‘gentrification’ in Oakland, CA,” Antipode, 51(3), pp. 878–898.
  53. McKittrick K. 2011, “On plantations, prisons, and a black sense of place,” Social & Cultural Geography, 12(8), pp. 947–963.
  54. Muzaffar M.I. 2007, The periphery within: Modern architecture and the making of the third world, Doctoral dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  55. Parsons T. 1964, “Evolutionary universals in society,” American Sociological Review, pp. 339–357.
  56. Peeren E., Stuit H., Van Weyenberg A. 2016, “Introduction: Peripheral visions in the globalizing present,” in Peripheral visions in the globalizing present, Brill, pp. 1–29.
  57. Pereira P.C.X. 2005, “Dinâmica imobiliária e metropolização: A nova lógica do crescimento urbano em São Paulo,” Scripta nova: Revista electrónica de geografía y ciencias sociales, 9.
  58. Pieterse E. 2010, “Cityness and African urban development,” Urban Forum, 21(3), pp. 205–219.
  59. Pratt M.L. 1991, “Arts of the contact zone,” Profession, pp 33–40.
  60. Quijano A. 1977, Dependencia, urbanización y cambio social en Latinoamérica, Mosca Azul Editores.
  61. Quijano A. 2000, “Coloniality of power and Eurocentrism in Latin America,” Nepantla, 1(3), pp. 533–580.
  62. Quijano A. 2007, “Coloniality and modernity/rationality,” Cultural Studies, 21(2-3), pp. 168–178.
  63. Quijano A., Wallerstein I. 1992, “Americanity as a concept, or the Americas in the modern world,” International social science journal, 44(4), pp. 549–557.
  64. Rabinow P. 1995, French modern: Norms and forms of the social environment, University of Chicago Press.
  65. Rabinow P. 2008, “Midst anthropology’s problems,” in A. Ong, S. J. Collier (eds.), Global assemblages: Technology, politics, and ethics as anthropological problems, Blackwell Publishing, pp. 40–54.
  66. Ren X. 2021, “The peripheral turn in global urban studies: Theory, evidence, sites,” South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal, 26.
  67. Robinson J. 2002, “Global and world cities: A view from off the map,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 26(3), pp. 531–554.
  68. Robinson J. 2013a, Ordinary cities: Between modernity and development, Routledge.
  69. Robinson J. 2013b, “The urban now: Theorising cities beyond the new,” European Journal of Cultural Studies, 16(6), pp. 659–677.
  70. Rofman A.B. 1974, Dependencia, estructura de poder y formación regional en América Latina, Siglo Veintiuno Editores.
  71. Rolnik R. 2019, Urban warfare: Housing under the empire of finance, Verso Books.
  72. Rostow W.W. 1959, “The stages of economic growth,” The Economic History Review, 12(1), pp. 1–6.
  73. Roy A. 2009, “The 21st-Century Metropolis: New Geographies of Theory,” Regional Studies, 43(6), pp. 819–830.
  74. Roy A. 2011, “Slumdog cities: Rethinking subaltern urbanism,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 35(2), pp. 223–238.
  75. Roy A. 2019, “Racial banishment,” Keywords in Radical Geography: Antipode at 50, pp. 227–230.
  76. Roy A., Ong A. (eds.) 2011, Worlding cities: Asian experiments and the art of being global, Wiley-Blackwell.
  77. Ruddick S., Peake L., Tanyildiz G.S., Patrick, D. 2018, “Planetary urbanization: An urban theory for our time?” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 36(3), pp. 387–404.
  78. Sassen-Koob S. 1980, “The internationalization of the labor force,” Studies in Comparative International Development, 15(4), pp. 3–25.
  79. Sassen-Koob S. 1983, “Labor migrations and the new international division of labor,” in J. C. Nash, M. P. Fernández-Kelly (eds.), Women, men, and the international division of labor, State University of New York Press.
  80. Schteingart M. 1973, Urbanización y dependencia en América Latina, Ediciones S.I.A.P.
  81. Sheppard E., Leitner H., Maringanti A. 2013, “Provincializing global urbanism: A Manifesto,” Urban Geography, 34(7), pp. 893–900.
  82. Simone A. 2010, City life from Jakarta to Dakar: Movements at the crossroads, Routledge.
  83. Skocpol T. 1977, “Wallerstein’s world capitalist system: A theoretical and historical critique,” American Journal of Sociology, 82(5) pp. 1075–1090.
  84. Spivak G.C. 1984, “Criticism, Feminism and the Institution,” Interview conducted by Elisabeth Gross, Thesis Eleven. Critical Theory and Historical Sociology, 10/11(1), pp. 175–187.
  85. Spivak G.C. 1985, “The Rani of Sirmur: An essay in reading the archives,” History and theory, 24(3), pp. 247-272.
  86. Spivak G.C. 1999, A critique of postcolonial reason: Toward a history of the vanishing present, Harvard University Press.
  87. Spivak G.C. 2015, “Can the subaltern speak?” in P. Williams, L. Chrisman (eds.), Colonial discourse and post-colonial theory: A reader, Routledge.
  88. Stewart-Ambo T., Yang K.W. 2021, “Beyond land acknowledgment in settler institutions,” Social Text, 39(1), pp. 21–46.
  89. Tanaka G.M.M. 2006, “Periferia: Conceito, práticas e discursos; práticas sociais e processos urbanos na metrópole de São Paulo,” Doctoral Dissertation, University of São Paulo.
  90. Torres H. da G., Marques E. C. 2001, “Reflexões Sobre a Hiperperiferia: Novas e velhas faces da pobreza no entorno municipal,” Revista Brasileira de Estudos Urbanos e Regionais, 4, pp. 49–70.
  91. UN-HABITAT (United Nations Human Settlement Programme) 2016, World Cities Report.
  92. UN-HABITAT 2005, Financing Shelter.
  93. Vegliò S. 2021, “Postcolonizing planetary urbanization: Aníbal Quijano and an alternative genealogy of the urban,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 45(4), pp. 663–678.
  94. Wallerstein I. 1974, The modern world-system, volume I: Capitalist agriculture and the origins of the European world-economy in the sixteenth century, Academic Press.
  95. Yiftachel O. 2009a, “Theoretical notes on ‘gray cities:’ The coming of urban apartheid?” Planning Theory, 8(1), pp. 88–100.
  96. Yiftachel O. 2009b, “Critical theory and gray space: Mobilization of the colonized,” City, 13(2-3), pp. 246–263.
PDF
  • Publication Year: 2022
  • Pages: 24-48

XML
  • Publication Year: 2022

Chapter Information

Chapter Title

Peripheries

Authors

Giuseppina Forte

Language

English

DOI

10.36253/978-88-5518-661-2.02

Peer Reviewed

Publication Year

2022

Copyright Information

© 2022 Author(s)

Content License

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Metadata License

CC0 1.0

Bibliographic Information

Book Title

Embodying Peripheries

Editors

Giuseppina Forte, Kuan Hwa

Peer Reviewed

Number of Pages

304

Publication Year

2022

Copyright Information

© 2022 Author(s)

Content License

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Metadata License

CC0 1.0

Publisher Name

Firenze University Press

DOI

10.36253/978-88-5518-661-2

ISBN Print

978-88-5518-660-5

eISBN (pdf)

978-88-5518-661-2

eISBN (xml)

978-88-5518-662-9

Series Title

Ricerche. Architettura, Pianificazione, Paesaggio, Design

Series ISSN

2975-0342

Series E-ISSN

2975-0350

310

Fulltext
downloads

273

Views

Export Citation

1,346

Open Access Books

in the Catalogue

2,262

Book Chapters

3,790,127

Fulltext
downloads

4,420

Authors

from 923 Research Institutions

of 65 Nations

65

scientific boards

from 348 Research Institutions

of 43 Nations

1,248

Referees

from 381 Research Institutions

of 38 Nations