Abstract
This article offers a critical assessment of Loic Wacquant’s influential advanced marginality framework with reference to research undertaken on a London public/social housing estate. Following Wacquant, it has become the orthodoxy that one of the major vectors of advanced marginality is territorial stigmatisation and that this particularly affects social housing estates, for example via mass media deployment of the ‘sink estate’ label in the UK. This article is based upon a multi-method case study of the Aylesbury estate in south London—an archetypal stigmatised ‘sink estate.’ The article brings together three aspects of residents’ experiences of the Aylesbury estate: territorial stigmatisation and dissolution of place, both of which Wacquant focuses on, and housing conditions which he neglects. The article acknowledges the deprivation and various social problems the Aylesbury residents have faced. It argues, however, that rather than internalising the extensive and intensive media-fuelled territorial stigmatisation of their ‘notorious’ estate, as Wacquant’s analysis implies, residents have largely disregarded, rejected, or actively resisted the notion that they are living in an ‘estate from hell,’ while their sense of place belonging has not dissolved. By contrast, poor housing—in the form of heating breakdowns, leaks, infestation, inadequate repairs and maintenance—caused major distress and frustration and was a more important facet of their everyday lives than territorial stigmatisation. The article concludes by arguing that housing should be foregrounded, rather than neglected, in the analysis of the dynamics of urban advanced marginality.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Social Psychology
Reference75 articles.
1. Attenburrow, J. J., Murphy, A. R., & Simms, A. G. (1978). The problems of some large local authority estates: An exploratory study. London: Department of the Environment.
2. August, M. (2014). Challenging the rhetoric of stigmatization: The forgotten benefits of concentrated poverty in Toronto’s Regent Park. Environment and Planning A, 46(6), 1317–1333.
3. Barton, L. (2005, October 14). Death of an estate. The Guardian. Retrieved from https://www.theguardian.com/society/2005/oct/14/communities.g2
4. Baxter, R. (2017). The high-rise home: Verticality as practice in London. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 41(2), 334–352.
5. Beanland, C. (2014, March 14). Channel 4’s Aylesbury estate ident gets a revamp: Starring the residents. The Guardian. Retrieved from https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2014/mar/14/channel-4-aylesbury-estate-ident-revamped
Cited by
27 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献