Geographical scholarship has, since the late 1990s, shown how infrastructure was central to the making of urban modernity and the metabolic transformation of socio-natures. Meanwhile, the work of Latin American scholars including Aníbal Quijano and Maria Lugones has focussed attention on the imbrications between modernity and coloniality, in particular through the international racial division of labour. Moving between these ideas, I argue that there is intellectual and political ground to be gained by specifically accounting for the coloniality of infrastructure, in both its material and epistemic dimensions. I ground the analysis in the history of Recife, Northeast of Brazil, analyzing the role of British engineering in the production of the city's landscape and infrastructure, and address the epistemic dimensions of the coloniality of infrastructural by exploring infrastructural spectacle in 1920s Recife. Finally, I explore how the coloniality of infrastructure directs our attention to race, labour and finance.
The coloniality of infrastructure: Engineering, landscape and modernity in Recife
Tipo de Material
Artigo de Periódico
Autor Principal
Davies, Archie
Sexo
Homem
Código de Publicação (ISSN)
1472-3433
Título do periódico
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
Volume
39
Ano de Publicação
2021
Local da Publicação
Londres
Página Inicial
740
Página Final
757
Idioma
Inglês
Palavras chave
Coloniality of infrastructure
coloniality of power
urban political ecology
infrastructure
Recife
Resumo
Disciplina
Método e Técnica de Pesquisa
Qualitativo
Área Temática
Referência Espacial
Cidade/Município
Recife
Macrorregião
Nordeste
Brasil
Habilitado
UF
Pernambuco
Referência Temporal
1920-1930
Localização Eletrônica
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02637758211018706