Physical and Symbolic Borders and Boundaries and How They Unfold in Space
Editat de Basak Tanulku, Simone Pekelsmaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 iul 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032408118
ISBN-10: 1032408111
Pagini: 314
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Routledge
ISBN-10: 1032408111
Pagini: 314
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Routledge
Cuprins
Introduction: “A world supposed to be borderless” by Basak Tanulku and Simone Pekelsma
Section 1: Borders, Identity, and Space
1. “The unbearable division of being. A gender approach to the physical and symbolic boundaries between men and women” by Maricela Guzmán Cáceres.
2. “The ‘Casteised Borders’ and Dalit women in Mumbai” by Abhinaya Ramesh.
3. “The politics of everyday gendered boundaries: (inter)national legislation, local norms, and young women's (im)mobility in a rural area on Europe's edge” by Elena Mamoulaki.
4. “National (De)fence” by Paula Kaniewska.
Section 2: Borders and the City
5. “Of Gates and Windows: Advertising Imagery of Palos Verdes Estates and other Olmsted Brothers' Gated Communities” by Nicolás Mariné.
6. “Who lives behind the wall?: views from non-gated residents about gated communities in Costa Rica” by Karla Barrantes Chaves.
7. “Boundaries between private and public in the construction of limits on social housing in Sydney, Australia” by Greta Werner.
8. “Mobile borders on ordinary urban displacement: certain effects of the ‘criminal subjection’ in the city of Rio de Janeiro”, by Vittorio Talone.
9. “News Journalism and the Reproduction of urban borders, stigma, and Inequalities in Post-apartheid South Africa” by Kristen Hill Maher and Renee Owens.
10. “Stay Away from me, but Don’t fly away: A dramaturgical approach to the human-seagull Distancing during aperitivo time in Venice” by Francesco Zuccolo.
11. “GHETTO: Aerial photographs of exclusion inside or outside in case of Roman Diocletian’s Palace in Split” by Ana Peraica.
Section 3: Borders across and beyond the Country
12. “How transport infrastructures become psychological, social, ecological, and land use boundaries” by Paulo Anciaes and Job van Eldijk.
13. “Fragmented Frictional Flows: De-constructing discursive boundaries in the pursuit of contextual infrastructure imaginaries” by Jonas Le Thierry d’Ennequin.
14. “Where do First Nations travel in the news media?: Spatial Analysis of News Stories on First Nations in The Australian and the Daily Liberal” by Holly Eva Katherine Randell-Moon.
15. “Immunity Borders: Re-framing Schengen border security through immunity paradigm” by Chiara Davino and Lorenza Villani.
16. “Aquamobile Transit and Maritime Boundary-Making” by Sharon Roseman.
Epilogue: “A research agenda for border studies. On relational borders, chronopolitics and border art” by Luca Paolo Cirillo, Paschalina T. Garidou, Henk van Houtum.
Section 1: Borders, Identity, and Space
1. “The unbearable division of being. A gender approach to the physical and symbolic boundaries between men and women” by Maricela Guzmán Cáceres.
2. “The ‘Casteised Borders’ and Dalit women in Mumbai” by Abhinaya Ramesh.
3. “The politics of everyday gendered boundaries: (inter)national legislation, local norms, and young women's (im)mobility in a rural area on Europe's edge” by Elena Mamoulaki.
4. “National (De)fence” by Paula Kaniewska.
Section 2: Borders and the City
5. “Of Gates and Windows: Advertising Imagery of Palos Verdes Estates and other Olmsted Brothers' Gated Communities” by Nicolás Mariné.
6. “Who lives behind the wall?: views from non-gated residents about gated communities in Costa Rica” by Karla Barrantes Chaves.
7. “Boundaries between private and public in the construction of limits on social housing in Sydney, Australia” by Greta Werner.
8. “Mobile borders on ordinary urban displacement: certain effects of the ‘criminal subjection’ in the city of Rio de Janeiro”, by Vittorio Talone.
9. “News Journalism and the Reproduction of urban borders, stigma, and Inequalities in Post-apartheid South Africa” by Kristen Hill Maher and Renee Owens.
10. “Stay Away from me, but Don’t fly away: A dramaturgical approach to the human-seagull Distancing during aperitivo time in Venice” by Francesco Zuccolo.
11. “GHETTO: Aerial photographs of exclusion inside or outside in case of Roman Diocletian’s Palace in Split” by Ana Peraica.
Section 3: Borders across and beyond the Country
12. “How transport infrastructures become psychological, social, ecological, and land use boundaries” by Paulo Anciaes and Job van Eldijk.
13. “Fragmented Frictional Flows: De-constructing discursive boundaries in the pursuit of contextual infrastructure imaginaries” by Jonas Le Thierry d’Ennequin.
14. “Where do First Nations travel in the news media?: Spatial Analysis of News Stories on First Nations in The Australian and the Daily Liberal” by Holly Eva Katherine Randell-Moon.
15. “Immunity Borders: Re-framing Schengen border security through immunity paradigm” by Chiara Davino and Lorenza Villani.
16. “Aquamobile Transit and Maritime Boundary-Making” by Sharon Roseman.
Epilogue: “A research agenda for border studies. On relational borders, chronopolitics and border art” by Luca Paolo Cirillo, Paschalina T. Garidou, Henk van Houtum.
Notă biografică
Basak Tanulku is an independent scholar based in Istanbul, Turkey. She holds a PhD degree in sociology, Lancaster University in the UK. She conducted her PhD study on gated communities. Since then, Tanulku has worked on different subjects, such as socio-spatial fragmentation, urban transformation and vacancy, urban gardens, alternative spaces and initiatives, urban protests, and the conflicts that emerge in public spaces and commons, boundary-making, and the interaction between space and people. Lastly, Tanulku works on the Lake District and Cumbria (England), particularly on the interaction between its natural and cultural elements and its culture and wild(er)ness.
Simone Pekelsma is in the final stages of her PhD at Radboud University. She has a great interest in translating her academic work to other worlds, including, for example, policy (i.e. Eurocities) and popular science (Geografie and Agora Magazine). Simone currently works for Utrecht University in a double role. She is a knowledge broker/business developer in human geography and spatial planning and the managing director of a research hub on the future of food.
Simone Pekelsma is in the final stages of her PhD at Radboud University. She has a great interest in translating her academic work to other worlds, including, for example, policy (i.e. Eurocities) and popular science (Geografie and Agora Magazine). Simone currently works for Utrecht University in a double role. She is a knowledge broker/business developer in human geography and spatial planning and the managing director of a research hub on the future of food.