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  The Spaces of the Modern City  Imaginaries, Politics, and Everyday Life 
 Princeton University Press  
Copyright © 2008   Princeton University Press 
All right reserved. ISBN: 978-0-691-13343-0 
    Introduction    GYAN PRAKASH  
  
  If modernity is a Faustian bargain to unleash human potential and subdue  nature to culture, then modern cities are its most forceful and enduring  expressions. The breathless intensity and the awesome power of modern  life have made and remade cities across the world: London and Paris,  Shanghai and Hong Kong, Tokyo and Mumbai, New York and Mexico City. The  great dramas of recent centuries-the triumph of industrialization and  capitalism, the erection of powerful state apparatuses and the outbreaks  of political insurrections, the exercise of colonial control and eruptions  of anticolonial movements-were enacted on the stage of the modern cities.  These urban spaces have shaped, and were shaped by, race, class, and  gender relations and exclusions. Modern urban life, lived on streets and  in apartments and slums, has produced new subjects, solidarities, and  meanings. The city-scape-its streets and sidewalks, its public space, the  ebb and flow of its crowd, its infrastructure of transportation-has served  as the setting for dynamic encounters and experiences. A great deal of  modern literature, art, and cinema would be unthinkable without the modern  city. In an important sense, cities are the principal landscapes of  modernity.  
  Nearly as old as the modern city is the critical attention fromwriters  and social commentators. One has to only think of the brilliant  reflections of the European urbanists of the early twentieth century:  Georg Simmel on the psychic space of the metropolis; Siegfried Kracauer on  the mass forms of everyday life, taste, and entertainment; and Walter  Benjamin on the dreamscape of commodities. These writings continue to  inform our understanding of the contemporary urban experience. But the  recent spurt of urbanization questions the idea of the European  metropolis, defined as a bounded unit by modernist theory, as the  paradigmatic modern city. As globalization increasingly extends urban  forms across the world and integrates the existing cities into vast  urbanized systems of communication, transnational flows of finance,  commodities, labor, images, and ideas, the idea of the city as an  organism, defined by an internally coherent civic life and structured by  clear relationships to the region, nation, and wider world, appears  obsolete. Urban theorists tell us that the city is dead. They suggest  that, in place of the clearly defined unity called the city, we live  increasingly in the amorphous and expanding spaces of urban networks.  
  Even as recent change forces us to rethink the urban form, it is  undeniable that we continue to speak of cities as specific spatial  formations: London, New York, Mumbai, Hong Kong. Urban sprawl and the rise  of vast urban networks connected by rapid transportation systems do not  erase the idea of cities as particular places, each defined by its  distinctive constellation of social space, history, and memory. It may be  the case that the production of space-binding center and periphery, city  and the countryside-has superseded the city, as Lefebvre suggests, but  lived experience, as he himself also argues, is not subsumed by spatial  practices. Urban dwellers experience their globally situated and  connected urban space as decidedly local lifeworlds, thick with specific  experiences, practices, imaginations, and memories.  
  Written against the background of these two opposed representations, this  volume represents an effort to rethink the history of urban modernity and  urban change. This means, first, expanding the focus beyond Europe and  North America to include the experiences of urban modernity in Asia,  Africa, and Latin America. It entails approaching the historical  experiences of modern urban forms and transformations as ineluctably  global, specific, diverse, and divergent. Second, what unites the essays  dealing with cities ranging across the world and discrepant historical  moments is the concentrated focus on the city as a spatial form of social  life and power relations, not just a site of society and politics. The  contributors identify historical processes in the urban form itself. This  does not only mean the structure and design of the built environment but  also the entire architecture of urban life and representations; they  regard urban forms as society, economy, culture, and politics. Third, its  approach is interdisciplinary. The contributions range across several  disciplines-sociology, history, art history, cinema, and cultural  studies-and each essay treats different fields of knowledge. This is as it  should be, for cities are composed of many fragments, each one requiring  the examination of several dimensions of knowledge. Any attempt to provide a singular and totalizing map of the city can only impoverish the richness  and multiplicity of the urban experience.  
  
  The City and the Urban  
  Urban studies is not a new field, but the past two decades have witnessed  a noticeable "urban turn" in scholarship. In disciplines ranging from  anthropology to history, sociology to literature, and architecture to film  and cultural studies, there is renewed interest in urbanism. This spurt of  academic attention has occurred against the background of the rapidly  quickening pace of urbanization. As early as 1970, Henri Lefebvre wrote  about urbanization superseding industrialization as the global dynamic of  capitalism. Whatever one may think of his view about the supplanting of  industrialization, there is no doubt that urbanization is a central force  in the contemporary world. According to UN estimates, whereas 30 percent  of the world population was urban in 1950, this proportion rose to 47  percent in 2000 and is expected to reach 60 percent by 2030. Much of the  developed world has been predominantly urban at least since the early  twentieth century as a result of capitalist industrialization and colonial  and imperial expansion. The recent spurt in urbanization, therefore, is  concentrated in the developing regions of the world. Mexico City, Sao  Paolo, and Mumbai are experiencing explosive growth, outstripping the  populations of old cities such as London, Paris, and even New York.  Breakneck expansion of manufacturing and striking economic growth animate  rapid urbanization in some cases, as in China. But, in other cases, as in  sub-Saharan Africa, the runaway growth of cities occurs in the context of  economic stagnation, growing debt, and economic crisis, producing specters  of political and social convulsions.  
  The spurt in urbanization is a matter not just of numbers but also of  change in the urban form. Suburbanization and the proliferation of "edge"  cities at highway interchanges encapsulate the transformation in the urban  landscape in North America. Paris no longer consists only of the city  built by Baron Haussmann but also includes the towns connected to it  through roadways, airports, and metro lines. The megacities of the  developing world, swollen with rural immigrants, are burgeoning with slums  and squatter settlements, pointing to the increasing urbanization of  poverty. As the urban network extends to fill the spaces between the city  and the countryside, one can no longer speak of a strict divide between  the two. Increasingly, regional urban complexes and huge urban corridors  have blurred the earlier city-hinterland distinctions. China, for example,  now contains two immense urban networks, one extending from Hong Kong to  Guangzhou on the Pearl River Delta, and the other spreading outward from  Shanghai on the Yangtze River Delta. The emergence of such regional  constellations has also meant a massive urbanization of the countryside.  These urban processes cannot be situated exclusively within national  borders, for global movements of finance capital, people, ideas, and  images traverse the cities. These movements across territories are not  qualitatively equal-the migration of Mexican laborers across the border to  the United States and the circulation of Hollywood films across the globe  are not the same-but globalization confounds the earlier center-periphery  dichotomy.  
  Urban theorists contend that capitalist globalization has also overwhelmed  the modernist city of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.  Classic political movements and ideologies nursed in the heyday of  modernist cities have lost their appeal, and new informational networks  and "pirate modernity" have marginalized old urban solidarities. As  globalization produces different kinds of legal regimes and citizens, and  new hierarchies of cities and urban dwellers, it poses a new set of  questions for citizenship, identity, and politics. The nonlegal basis of  urban existence and politics in the slums and squatter settlements of the  global South mocks the classic ideal of the city as the space of civil  society and political discourse. Never realized in practice even in  European cities, this ideal lies in ruins. The global processes and  representations of contemporary urbanization have destroyed the halo of  this modernist urbanism. Today, it is difficult to sustain the  paradigmatic notion of modern cities as unified formations, securely  located within their national borders, with clearly legible politics and  society.  
  Paul Virilio had predicted the dissolution of the city by media and  communication. But it was left to Rem Koolhaas, the architect and urban  theorist, to celebrate the death of the modernist city and hail the  emergent urban form: the "Generic City." Writing in 1988 about the  emergent urban forms, he emphasized a shift from the center to the  periphery, fragmentation, and spontaneous processes, and described his  research on the contemporary city as "a retro-active manifesto for the yet  to be recognized beauty of the twentieth-century urban landscape." He  followed this up by directing a research program at the Harvard School of  Design, called the "Project on the City," that aimed to understand the  "the maelstrom of modernization" that was creating a "completely new urban  substance." The project has produced three jumbo volumes of text,  photographs, maps, graphics, and statistics that chart the mutations of  urban culture, the explosive urbanization in China's Pearl River Delta,  and the global expansion of consumption. Assemblages of different  materials rather than conventional books, these volumes embody in their  form the fragmented, patched-together, runaway urbanism that they seek to  represent. There is no prior theory that drives this investigation, only  the premise that the paradigmatic European city of the nineteenth and  early twentieth centuries provides little understanding for the emergent  form. Consisting of the endless repetition of certain simple structural  modules, the Generic City, according to Koolhaas, has spread across  continents. "The definitive move away from the countryside, from  agriculture, to the city is not a move to the city as we knew it: it is a  move to the Generic City, the city so pervasive that it has come to the  country." Spreading and sprawling, the Generic City liberates the city  from the captivity of the center, from the straitjacket of identity. It  self-destructs and renews according to present needs and abilities. It is  free from history. The Generic City is the post-city being prepared on the  site of ex-city."     There is no doubt that certain urban forms-shopping malls, entertainment  zones, multiplex theaters, atriums, and airports and hotels that double as  cities unto themselves-have become a common sight in cities across the  world. But Koolhaas gets so caught up in the present's proclamation of its  novelty and singularity that he fails to interrogate it. Consider, for  example, the case of Shanghai, the paradigmatic example of China's  transformation by capitalist modernization. With its gleaming skyscrapers  on the Bund, the maze of highway overpasses and bridges, efficient  underground transportation, and the proliferation of generic shopping  malls, restaurants, and cafés, the city evokes the power of newness.  Change appears weightless, free from the burden of history. To be sure,  there is a historical preservation movement and a revival of interest in  the Shanghai of the 1920s-focused on its Art Deco architecture,  cosmopolitan literature and cultural artifacts, and the gangster world.   But this memory is selective; it skips over the city's imperial and  communist history in order to draw a line of continuity between the  cosmopolitan culture of "old Shanghai" and the global, contemporary city  to suggest that the present is the reappearance of the past. This  ransacks the past to suit the present chimera of novelty and dynamism.  Ackbar Abbas writes that Shanghai exists today as a remake, "a  shot-by-shot reworking of a classic, with a different cast, addressed to a  different audience, not 'Back to the Future' but 'Forward to the Past.'"   This remake glides over historical discontinuities and fuses the past  and the present to create a single, spectacular image of Shanghai as a  modern, global city. But cities have never been mere expressions of a  singular logic or a dominant historical force-neither in the past nor in  the present. To think of Paris as the embodiment of classic modernity, Los  Angeles as the paradigmatic postmodern metropolis, and Shanghai as the  typical expression of globalization is to simplify their complexity,  smooth out their social and political contradictions. The excessive focus  on "global cities" like New York, London, Tokyo, and Shanghai, and the  ranking of cities according to their position on the scale of economic  globalization also tends to flatten their urban processes and experiences  and suggests that capital obliterates distinctions and functions without  social and cultural differences.  
  Urban change is undeniable, but the historicist narrative of the rise and  fall of the city is deeply flawed. Foucault wrote: "The great obsession of  the nineteenth century was, as we know, history: with its themes of  development and suspension, of crisis and cycle, themes of ever  accumulating past." Speaking this language of development, the discourse  of the death of the city suppresses the spatiality of history. The  history of the modern city as a space of porosity, multiplicity,  difference, division, and disruption is concealed when urban change is  represented as the unfolding of one historical stage to another, from the  bounded unity and identity of the city of industrial capitalism to the  "placeless" and "generic city" of globalization-from modernity to  postmodernity. We should remember that "placelessness," now attributed to  postmodernity, was once identified with industrial modernity. Thus, Marx  spoke of capitalism's forceful expansion across all borders and frontiers  in its relentless drive to transform everything concrete into abstract  measures of value: "all that is solid melts into air." The language of  temporal succession forgets this history and gets caught up in the  present's self-proclamation of its novelty and singularity.  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
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