<p> "Urbanities are the intersection and always provisional conjunctions of multiple inhabitations negotiated across a heterogeneity of agencies and forces—engendering dispositions always unsettled in their everyday encounters and unruly ecologies. This text is an unparalleled exploration of the liveliness that other-than-human beings infuse into a sociality extended beyond biopolitical conceptualization and control, underlining an urban economy more attuned to its natural surrounds. An essential excursion across the shifting landscapes of incipient sustenance."—AbdouMaliq Simone, author of <i>The Surrounds: Urban Life within and beyond Capture</i><br /><br /> </p><p> "Barua’s ambitious and poetic account will undoubtedly become a touchstone text in several fields."—<i>Urban Studies</i></p><p> </p><p> "A phenomenal work that exhorts the reader to reconceptualize the urban environment as a lively meshwork of human and other-than-human entities."—<i>H-Net</i></p><p> </p><p> "[<i>Lively Cities] </i>provides a new perspective on the continuous formation of urban ecologies."—<i>Social Anthropology</i></p><p> </p><p> "A rich and evocative theoretical framework for thinking the city in a minor key."—<i>Humanimalia</i></p><p> </p><p> "Ecological formations inhere in the fabric of the urban, and yet […] they have been marginalized as objects of concern by major strands of urban theory.<i> Lively Cities </i>remedies this absence. "—<i>City</i></p><p> </p><p> "Expands the debate significantly and productively."—<i>Urban Geography</i></p><p> </p>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Maan Barua is a university lecturer in human geography at the University of Cambridge.