San Diego's Hybrid Urban Borderlands

San Diego's Hybrid Urban Borderlands
Title San Diego's Hybrid Urban Borderlands PDF eBook
Author Albert Rossmeier
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 346
Release 2023-08-29
Genre Social Science
ISBN 3658426675

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This study aims for a wider understanding of the redevelopment processes that emerged several decades ago in downtown San Diego and now gradually spread over the downtown edges into the inner ring. Perspectively situated in the fields of urban landscape and urban border studies, the research project outlines how the eastward ‘redevelopment wave’ in San Diego contests socialized neighborhood (boundary) perceptions by transforming the former first-tier suburbs from disinvested communities into ‘urban villages’ and trendy places to be. The study shows how the redevelopment perforates, dissolves, and shifts socialized, linear neighborhood boundaries into areas that are simultaneously part of the one and the other neighborhood. In the present work, the resulting, rather undefined or stretched border areas have been referred to as hybrid urban borderlands. This notion is a novel conceptual approach that can be deemed a promising lens for future studies on neighborhood change, urban redevelopment, and socio-spatial re-interpretation beyond the context of San Diego.

Transformation Processes in Europe and Beyond

Transformation Processes in Europe and Beyond
Title Transformation Processes in Europe and Beyond PDF eBook
Author Florian Weber
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 827
Release
Genre
ISBN 3658428945

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San Diego's Hybrid Urban Borderlands

San Diego's Hybrid Urban Borderlands
Title San Diego's Hybrid Urban Borderlands PDF eBook
Author Albert Roßmeier
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2023
Genre
ISBN 9783658426682

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Landscape Conflicts

Landscape Conflicts
Title Landscape Conflicts PDF eBook
Author Karsten Berr
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 441
Release
Genre
ISBN 3658433523

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Journal of Borderlands Studies

Journal of Borderlands Studies
Title Journal of Borderlands Studies PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 108
Release 2006
Genre Mexican-American Border Region
ISBN

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Coloniality of the US/Mexico Border

Coloniality of the US/Mexico Border
Title Coloniality of the US/Mexico Border PDF eBook
Author Roberto D. Hernández
Publisher University of Arizona Press
Pages 265
Release 2018-10-23
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0816538840

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National borders are often taken for granted as normal and necessary for a peaceful and orderly global civil society. Roberto D. Hernández here advances a provocative argument that borders—and border violence—are geospatial manifestations of long histories of racialized and gendered colonial violence. In Coloniality of the U-S///Mexico Border, Hernández offers an exemplary case and lens for understanding what he terms the “epistemic and cartographic prison of modernity/coloniality.” He adopts “coloniality of power” as a central analytical category and framework to consider multiple forms of real and symbolic violence (territorial, corporeal, cultural, and epistemic) and analyzes the varied responses by diverse actors, including local residents, government officials, and cultural producers. Based on more than twenty years of border activism in San Diego–Tijuana and El Paso–Ciudad Juárez, this book is an interdisciplinary examination that considers the 1984 McDonald’s massacre, Minutemen vigilantism, border urbanism, the ongoing murder of women in Ciudad Juárez, and anti-border music. Hernández’s approach is at once historical, ethnographic, and theoretically driven, yet it is grounded in analyses and debates that cut across political theory, border studies, and cultural studies. The volume concludes with a theoretical discussion of the future of violence at—and because of—national territorial borders, offering a call for epistemic and cartographic disobedience.

Border Matters

Border Matters
Title Border Matters PDF eBook
Author José David Saldívar
Publisher Univ of California Press
Pages 268
Release 2023-04-28
Genre History
ISBN 0520918363

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Border Matters locates the study of Chicano culture in a broad social context. José Saldívar examines issues of representation and expression in a diverse, exciting assortment of texts—corridos, novels, poems, short stories, punk and hip-hop music, ethnography, paintings, performance, art, and essays. Saldívar provides a sophisticated model for a new kind of U.S. cultural studies, one that challenges the homogeneity of U.S. nationalism and popular culture by foregrounding the contemporary experiences and historical circumstances facing Chicanos and Chicanas. This intellectually adventurous, politically engaged study applies borderlands and diaspora theory to Chicano cultural practices in a way that permanently changes our understanding of both the Chicano experience and the meaning of cultural theory. Defying national (and nationalistic) paradigms of culture, Saldívar argues that the culture of the borderlands is trans-national, constituting a social space in which new relations, hybrid cultures, and multi-voiced aesthetics are negotiated. Saldívar's critical readings treat culture as a social force and reveal the presence of social contexts within cultural texts. Border Matters maps out a new terrain for the study of culture, reshaping the way we understand migration, national identity, and intellectual inquiry itself.