TY - JOUR
T1 - Undecidability and the urban
T2 - Feminist pathways through urban political economy
AU - Kern, Leslie
AU - McLean, Heather
N1 - Funding Information:
Kern’s research was supported by a grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities
Funding Information:
Research Council of Canada. Heather McLean acknowledges the support of the Urban Studies Foundation, Fail Better and the Worker’s Theatre. A version of this paper was presented at the American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, 2016.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - There is a well-established body of feminist scholarship critiquing the methodological and epistemological limits of an "objective" view from nowhere in urban research and political economy frameworks. Recent developments, such as the planetary urbanization thesis, have reignited feminist efforts to counter patriarchal, colonial, and hegemonic ways of knowing. Here, we recount our frustrations with the reproduction of dominant political economic modes of "knowing" urban processes such as gentrification and culture-led regeneration in research that seeks to uncover the production of neoliberal spaces and subjectivities. We argue that this narrow approach forecloses the possibility of observing or working with radical world-making projects that stand outside of traditional understandings of the political. Thus, we heed our feminist colleagues' call to foreground the undecidability of the urban, allowing ourselves and our subjects to express uncertainty about the causes, outcomes, and impacts of urban processes. In what follows, we share short research vignettes from our projects in Toronto and Glasgow and discuss the implications of forging unexpected solidarities, engaging in embodied, participatory knowledge production, and reading urban politics off of persistent, uncertain, under-the-radar projects. We maintain that working from a position of undecidability yields greater potential for renewing our political imaginations beyond neoliberalism.
AB - There is a well-established body of feminist scholarship critiquing the methodological and epistemological limits of an "objective" view from nowhere in urban research and political economy frameworks. Recent developments, such as the planetary urbanization thesis, have reignited feminist efforts to counter patriarchal, colonial, and hegemonic ways of knowing. Here, we recount our frustrations with the reproduction of dominant political economic modes of "knowing" urban processes such as gentrification and culture-led regeneration in research that seeks to uncover the production of neoliberal spaces and subjectivities. We argue that this narrow approach forecloses the possibility of observing or working with radical world-making projects that stand outside of traditional understandings of the political. Thus, we heed our feminist colleagues' call to foreground the undecidability of the urban, allowing ourselves and our subjects to express uncertainty about the causes, outcomes, and impacts of urban processes. In what follows, we share short research vignettes from our projects in Toronto and Glasgow and discuss the implications of forging unexpected solidarities, engaging in embodied, participatory knowledge production, and reading urban politics off of persistent, uncertain, under-the-radar projects. We maintain that working from a position of undecidability yields greater potential for renewing our political imaginations beyond neoliberalism.
KW - Feminist urban theory
KW - Gentrification
KW - Neoliberalism
KW - Political economy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85031709046&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Journal Article
AN - SCOPUS:85031709046
VL - 16
SP - 405
EP - 426
JO - ACME
JF - ACME
IS - 3
ER -