Eric Kluitenberg on Fri, 24 Oct 2008 12:10:16 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-nl] De Balie, 15 november: By-Pass: Everyday Life and Contemporary Urbanism in India and China |
A A N K O N D I G I N G By-Pass Dagelijks leven en hedendaags urbanisme in India en China Internationaal symposium De Balie, Amsterdam Zaterdag 15 November Tijd | 10.00 - 17.00 uur Toegang | € 17,50 / 12,50 (inclusief lunch) Voor het eerst leeft de meerderheid van de wereldbevolking in steden. Het zwaartepunt van deze ontwikkeling ligt in Azië, waar de toekomst van de stad gestalte krijgt. By-Pass is een internationaal symposium over straatcultuur en het alledaagse leven in de zich razendsnel transformerende megasteden in India en China. Hiervoor wordt een groep vooraanstaande onderzoekers en stadsactivisten bijeen gebracht die zich in het bijzonder richten op de veranderingen op straatniveau: Informele en zelfgeorganiseerde structuren onttrekken zich aan alle formele kaders. Uiteindelijk botsen ze echter met de grootschalige en steeds snellere ontwikkelingsdynamiek van de Aziatische megalopolis. Ontwikkelingen op micro- and macroniveau zijn op conflictueuze wijze met elkaar verbonden in deze ongekend complexe stedelijke concentratiezones. Een belangrijke vraag daarbij is of er tussen-ruimtes bestaan die mensen de mogelijkheid geven hun leven vorm te geven tussen of buitenom deze tegenstelling? Het By-Pass symposium richt zich specifiek op het microniveau, Het werk van de filosoof Michel de Certeau is daarbij een belangrijke inspiratiebron. Het betekent een nieuw type urbanisme dat stedelijke ontwikkeling onderzoekt aan de hand van de dagelijkse handelingen van reguliere stadsbewoners in plaats van de top down ordeningsprocessen. Het zijn deze alledaagse handelingen die zich eerder onttrekken aan de officiële ordening van de stad, dan zich er openlijk tegen te verzetten. Het By-Pass symposium wordt georganiseerd door De Balie in Amsterdam in samenwerking met Sarai uit Delhi en CRIT uit Mumbai Met: Awadhendra Sharan (Historicus, Delhi) Ravi Sundaram (Sarai, Delhi), Juan Du (Architectuur-theoreticus, University of Hong Kong), Prasad Shetty (CRIT, Mumbai), Rupali Gupte (Architect, Mumbai), Solomon Benjamin (Politicoloog Bangalore / University of Toronto), Martijn de Waal (Mediatheoreticus, Amsterdam / Rijksuniversiteit Groningen), Wing Shing Tan (Sociaal geograaf, Hong Kong), Ranjani Mazumdar (Filmmaker en theoreticus, Delhi). [ Zie ook hieonder: “Confirmed Speakers” ] Redactie: Ravi Sundaram (Sarai) Prasad Shetty (CRIT) Merijn Oudenampsen (stadssocioloog) Eric Kluitenberg (De Balie) ------------------ A N N O U N C E M E N T By-Pass Everyday Life and Contemporary Urbanism in India and China International symposium De Balie, Amsterdam Saturday November 15 Time | 10.00 - 17.00 hrs. Admission | € 17,50 / 12,50 (including lunch) For the first time the majority of the world population lives in cities. At this crucial juncture the future of the city appears to be shaped in Asia. By-Pass is an international symposium about street culture and everyday life in the rapidly transforming megacities of India and China. The symposium will bring together a renowned group of researchers and urban activists to address these changes specifically at street level: informal and self-organised structures that bypass all formal urban regimes. Ultimately these informal practices collide with the increasingly vigourous dynamics of urban and spatial planning in the Asian megalopolis. Micro and macro levels are, however, in continuous exchange in these unprecedentedly complex urban concentration zones. An important questions is whether there are in-between spaces that may allow people to recast their lives between these two opposing binaries? The symposium will focus specifically on developments at the micro level. The work of philosopher Michel de Certeau has been an important source of inspiration here. In the wake of his micro-political explorations a new type of urban study has emerged that examines the practices of every day life and the activities of regular urban dwellers. More often than not these activities bypass official urban regimes, rather than resisting them. By-Pass is organised by De Balie in Amsterdam in collaboration with Sarai in Delhi and CRIT in Mumbai. With: Awadhendra Sharan (Historian, Delhi) Ravi Sundaram (Sarai, Delhi), Juan Du (Architectural theorist, University of Hong Kong), Prasad Shetty (CRIT, Mumbai), Rupali Gupte (Architect, Mumbai), Solomon Benjamin (Political scientist Bangalore / University of Toronto), Martijn de Waal (Media scholar, Amsterdam / University of Groningen), Wing Shing Tan (Sociaal geographer, Hong Kong), Ranjani Mazumdar (Film maker and theoretician, Delhi). Symposium editors: Ravi Sundaram (Sarai) Prasad Shetty (CRIT) Merijn Oudenampsen (Urban sociologist) Eric Kluitenberg (De Balie) --------------------- Confirmed speakers & biographical information: Awadhendra Sharan is a historian and Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (Delhi, India). His work involves research that connects environmental issues to urban space, with reference to the city of Delhi. He also works with Sarai, Delhi and offers guest lectures at the School of Planning and Architecture, Delhi and School of Environmental Studies, Delhi University. Juan Du is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Architecture, University of Hong Kong and Principal of IDU architecture. She teaches architectural design and contemporary urban theory. She has practised and taught in the United States, Europe and China and co-curated 'Performative-Cities' in the 2007 Shenzen-Hong Kong Biennalle Prasad Shetty is an executive member of the Collective Research Initiatives Trust, Mumbai and also works as an Urban Management Expert with the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority. His work involves research and teaching on contemporary Indian urbanism, with specific focus on issues relating to post-industrial landscapes, politics of property and entrepreneurial practices. Ranjani Mazumdar is an Independent Filmmaker & Associate Professor of Film Studies at the School of Arts & Aesthetics at Jawaharlal Nehru University (New Delhi, India). Her publications and films focus on urban cultures, popular cinema, gender and the cinematic city. She is also a visiting faculty at the Department of Cinema Studies, Tisch School of the Arts, New York University; at the Mass Communication Research Centre at Jamia University; and at the Film and Television Institute, Pune. Ravi Sundaram is a Fellow of the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, (Delhi, India) and is one of the initiators of Sarai, Delhi. He has written extensively on contemporary intersections of technology, media and urban experience. His writings have been translated into 15 languages and he has taught in universities in India and the United States. He was recently a Visiting Fellow at Princeton University. In Delhi he is a Visiting Faculty at the Urban Design Department, School of Planning & Architecture Rupali Gupte is an architect and urbanist. She works is a Senior Lecturer at the Kamala Raheja Institute of Architecture (Mumbai, India) and is also an executive member of CRIT, Mumbai. As an urban researcher and a designer she is interested in tactical urban conditions and design interventions. Her works includes studies of post industrial landscapes, housing types in Mumbai, a novel on a semi- fictional history of mumbai’s urbanism and writing on the city’s tactical infrastructures. Solomon Benjamin is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Toronto. Before coming to Toronto, he was an urban researcher operating from Bangalore, India. His interests lie in the politics of land and tenure and have been working on issues relating to the way big business re-shapes city governance. Wing Shin Tan (Hong Kong) Associate Professor, Department of Geography Hong Kog Baptist University Martijn de Waal (Netherlands) Researcher on urban and social issues and digital media at the University of Groningen and the University of Amsterdam. Contributed an essay on Chinese urban visuality to the recent anthology "The Chinese Dream" published by the Dynamic City Foundation (Rotterdam / Beijing), Fall 2008. ______________________________________________________ * Verspreid via nettime-nl. Commercieel gebruik niet * toegestaan zonder toestemming. <nettime-nl> is een * open en ongemodereerde mailinglist over net-kritiek. * Meer info, archief & anderstalige edities: * http://www.nettime.org/. * Contact: Menno Grootveld (rabotnik@xs4all.nl).