Affiliation:
1. University College London g.m.murawski@gmail.com
Abstract
This article critiques assumptions made by urban anthropologists and
other scholars of cities, focusing on currently fashionable theories of infrastructure,
materiality, and complexity. It problematizes how scholarship informed by
actor-network theory, assemblage theory and other varieties of (post)postmodernism
uses morphological optics and metaphors to represent social life, the material
world, and existence itself as necessarily “flat,” “complex” or “fuzzy.” As a corrective,
it proposes reorienting our social morphologies with reference to a Marxist
notion of infrastructure, founded on a dynamic understanding of the relationship
between determining economic base and determined superstructure. It constructs
its theoretical edifice with reference to the remaking of post-1945 Warsaw as a
socialist city through property expropriation and monumental architectural and
planning works, and post-1989 attempts to unmake its socialist character through
property reprivatization and unplanning.
Cited by
13 articles.
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