驱逐室:卡罗琳娜-玛丽亚-德-热苏斯如何帮助我们分析城市中的移民、种族隔离和公民政治

IF 2.4 2区 社会学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Diana Zacca Thomaz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在本文中,我提出了 "驱逐室 "这一分析框架,用于分析生活在城市边缘的公民和非公民之间的斗争。驱逐室 "这一隐喻由巴西已故黑人作家、贫民窟居民卡罗琳娜-玛丽亚-德-热苏斯(Carolina Maria de Jesus)提出。德热苏斯将城市视为一栋房子:市中心是其豪华的客厅;贫民窟则是其驱逐室,一个不稳定的空间,种族化的城市贫民就像一次性物品一样被推到这里。从这个比喻出发,我们可以认为,那些在城市驱逐房中被隔离和污名化的人,不仅在身体上被驱逐,而且在政治上也被驱逐。无论其合法公民身份如何,驱逐房居民都被构建为居住在城市客厅中的 "好公民 "的内在他者。由于他们的 "可驱逐性",他们的存在在空间上是隔离的,在时间上是短暂的。虽然驱逐室的框架可以帮助我们理解公民和非公民在城市中的边缘化,但它既不假定他们的社会同质性,也不假定一种统一的 "被驱逐者政治"。我将对这种政治中可能采取的策略,以及城市作为一个规划不断变化的房屋的空间和时间维度进行阐述。驱逐室推进了以移民、居住隔离和公民权政治为中心的研究议程,与全球南北方的城市背景息息相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The eviction room: How Carolina Maria de Jesus can help us analyze migration, segregation, and the politics of citizenship in the city
In this paper, I propose the “eviction room” as an analytical frame for the linked struggles of citizens and noncitizens living at the urban margins. The metaphor of the eviction room was coined by Carolina Maria de Jesus, a late Black Brazilian writer and favela dweller. De Jesus sees the city as a house: the city center is its luxurious living room; the favela, its eviction room, a precarious space to which the racialized urban poor are pushed like disposable objects. Expanding on this metaphor, we can think of those segregated and stigmatized in a city’s eviction rooms as not only physically but also politically cast out. Regardless of their legal citizenship status, eviction room dwellers are constructed as the immanent others of the “good citizens” inhabiting the city’s living rooms. Segregated in space, their presence is transient in time given their “evictability.” While the frame of the eviction room can help us make sense of the urban marginalization of both citizens and noncitizens, it assumes neither their social homogeneity nor a united “politics of the evicted.” I expand on possible strategies within such politics, as well as on the spatial and temporal dimensions of the city as a house with an ever-shifting plan. The eviction room advances a research agenda centered on migration, residential segregation, and the politics of citizenship relevant to urban contexts across the global south and north.
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CiteScore
5.50
自引率
7.40%
发文量
78
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