Cover & poster design: Erica Lombard.

Planned Violence →

This book brings the insights of social geographers and cultural historians into a critical dialogue with literary narratives of urban culture and theories of literary cultural production. In so doing, it explores new ways of conceptualizing the relationship between urban planning, its often violent effects, and literature. Comparing the spatial pasts and presents of the post-imperial and post/colonial cities of London, Delhi and Johannesburg, but also including case studies of other cities, such as Chicago, Belfast, Jerusalem and Mumbai, Planned Violence investigates how that iconic site of modernity, the colonial city, was imagined by its planners — and how this urban imagination, and the cultural and social interventions that arose in response to it, made violence a part of the everyday social life of its subjects. Throughout, however, the collection also explores the extent to which literary and cultural productions might actively resist infrastructures of planned violence, and imagine alternative ways of inhabiting post/colonial city spaces.

Hard copies available here.

Excerpts available on Academia.edu here.

Contents

  1. Planned Violence: Post/Colonial Urban Infrastructure, Literature, & Culture (Elleke Boehmer / Dominic Davies)

  2. White Cities, Black Streets: Planned Violence & Native Maps in Richard Wrights Chicago and Modikwe Dikobe’s Johannesburg (Loren Kruger)

  3. Grey Space, Tahrir Laser: Conspiracy, Critique, and the Urban in Julie Mehretu’s Depictions of Revolutionary Cairo (Nicholas Simcik Arese)

  4. Thames Valley Royal (or, Maxwell in Oxford): The Story of a Football Club and the History of a City (William Ghosh)

  5. Slums and the Postcolonial Uncanny (Ankhi Mukherjee)

  6. The Not-so-Quiet Violence of Bricks and Mortar (Zen Marie)

  7. Intervention I. What You Find in the River: Isolarion Ten Years On (James Attlee)

  8. The Intimacy of Infrastructure: Vulnerability and Abjection in Palestinian Jerusalem (Hanna Baumann)

  9. Sound Systems and Other Systems: The Policing of Urban Aesthetic Spaces in the Poetry of Linton Kwesi Johnson (Louisa Olufsen Layne)

  10. “Throwing Petrol on the Fire”: Writing in the Shadow of the Belfast Urban Motorway (Stephen O’Neill)

  11. Writing the City and Indian English Fiction: Planning, Violence, and Aesthetics (Alex Tickell)

  12. Blue Johannesburg (Pamila Gupta)

  13. Intervention II. Take Me There (Selma Dabbagh)

  14. “A Shadow Class Condemned to Movement”: Literary Urban Imaginings of Illegal Migrant Lives in the Global North (Ruvani Ranasinha)

  15. “A Dagger, a Revolver, a Bottle of Chloroform”: Colonial Spy Fiction, Revolutionary Reminiscences, and Indian Nationalist Terrrorism in Europe (Ole Birk Laursen)

  16. Detecting World-Literature: (Sub-)Urban Crimes in the Nineteenth Century (Upamanyu Pablo Mukherjee)

  17. Weird Collocations: Language as Infrastructure in the Storyworlds of China Miéville (Terence Cave)

  18. Aquacity Versus Austerity: The Politics and Poetics of Irish Water (Michael Rubenstein)

  19. Intervention III. Control (Courttia Newland)

  20. Afterword (Sarah Nuttall)