Space Place Power
Space Place Power
Space Place Power
Claudio Sopranzetti
Claudio Sopranzetti
an attention to space, and the relations of power inscribed in particular places, can contribute to
anthropological theory.
Requirements
Students will be evaluated on the basis of a final take-home exam. In this each student will be
required to write a 5000-word essay. The assessed essay is intended to enable you to critically
examine course material in greater depth, by putting readings across several weeks in dialogue.
Candidates will be required to answer one of a choice of five questions. These questions will be
distributed after the last week of class in Hilary Term. The final essay must be submitted by noon on
the Tuesday of the fourth week of Trinity term in hard copy (3 copies) to the Examination Schools.
Expected class participation includes:
(1) Regular attendance and contribution to discussion.
(2) A 1000-word response paper every four weeks based on two questions that will be circulated in
class a week ahead.
(3) Leading discussion: Starting from Week Four, three students will open the discussion by
presenting the weekly materials. You will be expected to speak for no more than 15 minutes during
which you should offer critical assessment of the weeks readings that link them to previous
discussions and pose some open-ended questions to start off discussion in class. Please do not
spend time summarizing the readings. You are not obliged to restrict yourself to the readings
indicated and in fact you are encouraged to draw on your general readings and to bring in material
and case studies relevant to the topic, whatever its source. Please consult with the lecturer for advice
on further readings beyond what is given here.
Claudio Sopranzetti
Non-presenting students must read the main ethnography of the week (marked in the syllabus as
E) and the required readings, as these will be the bases for discussion in class. This is a seminar class
so it will be essential to come prepared. They are also expected to come with a minimum of at least
one question or issue per topic and ideally with a sketch of how they would try to answer the
questions posed. Participation in discussion is essential!
Claudio Sopranzetti
(E) Erik Harms, Saigons Edge: On the Margins of Ho Chi Minh City, University of Minnesota Press,
2011
John Bird, Barry Curtis, Tim Putnam, Lisa Tickner, Mapping the Futures: Local Cultures, Global Change,
Routledge, 1993, Chapter 1 & 6
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Claudio Sopranzetti
Phil Hubbard & Rob Kitchin, Key Thinkers in Space and Place, Sage, 2011, David Harvey & Neil Smith
Optional:
David Harvey, Spaces of global capitalism : towards a theory of uneven geographical development, Verso, 2006,
Chapter 3
Neil Brenner, Beyond state-centrism? Space, territoriality, and geographical scale in globalization
studies, Theory and Society, 1999, 28 (1): 39-78
Ajantha Subramanian, Shorelines: Space and Rights in South India, 2009, Stanford University Press,
Introduction, Chapter 1, 3, 6
John Bird, Barry Curtis, Tim Putnam, Lisa Tickner, Mapping the Futures: Local Cultures, Global Change,
Routledge, 1993, Chapter 4
Erik Harms, Material Symbolism of Saigon's Edge: The Political-Economic and Symbolic
Transformation of H Ch Minh City's Periurban Zones, Pacific Affairs, 2011, 84(3): 455-473
(E) Keith Basso, Wisdom Sits in Place, UNM Press, 1996, Chapter 1 & 4
Setha Low, Embodied Space(s): Anthropological Theories of Body, Space, and Culture, Space and
Culture, 2003, 6(1): 9-18
Phil Hubbard & Rob Kitchin, Key Thinkers in Space and Place, Sage, 2011, Michel De Certeau & Yi-Fu
Tuan
Optional:
Catherine Fennell, Project Heat and Sensory Politics in Redeveloping Chicago Public Housing,
Ethnography, 2011, 12(1): 40-64
Margaret Rodman, Empowering place: multilocality and multivocality, American Anthropologist, 1992,
94(3): 640-656
M. Richardson, Being-in-the-plaza versus being-in-the-market: Material culture and the construction
of social reality, American Ethnologist, 1982, 9(1): 421-436
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Claudio Sopranzetti
Tim Ingold, Perception of the Environment: Livelihood, Dwelling, and Skill, Routledge, 2000, Chapters 1013
Wolfgang Schivelbusch, The Railway Journeys, University of California Press, 1986. Chapter 3 & 4
(E) Claudio Sopranzetti, The Owners of the Map: Motorcycle Taxi, Mobility, and Politics in
Bangkok, Harvard University, 2013, Chapters 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, conclusion
Phil Hubbard & Rob Kitchin, Key Thinkers in Space and Place, Sage, 2011, Henry Lefebvre
Optional:
Farha Ghannam, Mobility, Liminality, and Embodiment in urban Egypt, American Ethnologist, 2011
38 (4): 790-800
Friedrich Engels, The Condition of the Working Class in England, Penguin, 2009, pp.127-159
Claudio Sopranzetti
(E) Thongchai, Winichakul, Siam mapped : a history of the geo-body of a nation. Honolulu:
University of Hawaii Press. 1994, Intro, pp.113-172
Ana Maria Alonso, The Politics of Space, Time and Substance: State Formation, Nationalism, and
Ethnicity, Annual Review of Anthropology, 1994, 23: 379-405
Optional:
Timothy Mitchell, Colonizing Egypt, University of California Press, 1988, pp. 1- 95
Scott, James, Seeing Like a State, Yale University Press, 1998, Chapter 2
Scott, James, The Art of Not Being Governed, Yale University Press, 2009, Chapter 2-3
Deleuze, Gilles, Flix Guattari, A thousand plateaus : capitalism and schizophrenia , Athlone Press, 1988,
Chapter 12
David Atkinson, Nomadic strategies and colonial governance: domination and resistance in
Cyrenaica, 1923-1932, in Entanglements of power: geographies of domination/resistance, Routledge, 2000,
pp.93-122
Claudio Sopranzetti
Setha Low, Claiming Space for an Engaged Anthropology: Spatial Inequality and Social Exclusion,
American Anthropologist, 2011, 113(3): 389407
Melissa Wright, Asian spies, American Motors, and Speculations on the Space-time of Value,
Environment and Planning A, 2001, 33(12): 2175-2188
Daniel Miller, Making Love in Supermarkets, in The Cultural Economy Reader, Blackwell, 2004, pp.
251-265
Jane Pollard and Michael Samers, Islamic Banking and Finance: Postcolonial Political Economy and
the Decentring of Economic Geography, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 32: 313330
Claudio Sopranzetti