Urbicide: The Politics of Urban Destruction

Naslovnica
Routledge, 30. ruj 2008. - Broj stranica: 176

The term ‘urbicide’ became popular during the 1992-95 Bosnian war as a way of referring to widespread and deliberate destruction of the urban environment. Coined by writers on urban development in America, urbicide captures the sense that the widespread and deliberate destruction of buildings is a distinct form of violence.

Using Martin Heidegger’s notion of space and Jean-Luc Nancy’s idea of community, Martin Coward outlines a theoretical understanding of the urban condition at stake in such violence. He contends that buildings are targeted because they make possible a plural public space that is contrary to the political aims of ethnic-nationalist regimes. Illustrated with reference to several post-Cold War conflicts – including Bosnia, Chechnya and Israel/Palestine – this book is the first comprehensive analysis of organised violence against urban environments. It offers an original perspective to those seeking to better understand urbanity, political violence and the politics of exclusion.

 

Sadržaj

The destruction of shared space
1
1 Interpreting destruction of the built environment
17
2 The logic of urbicide
35
3 The built environment and shared spatiality
54
from Mitsein to the inoperative community
72
5 The political stakes of urbicide
91
6 The conceptual stakes of urbicide
108
Conclusion
122
Notes
138
Bibliography
147
Index
156
Autorska prava

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O autoru (2008)

Martin Coward is a lecturer in International Relations at the University of Sussex, UK. His research focuses on the nexus of identity, violence and territory. Currently, he is investigating the manner in which this nexus is exhibited in the contemporary relationship between city and war.

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