Re-inscribing the urban abject: Ngai Tahu and the Gothic Revival |
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Authors: | Howard McNaughton |
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Affiliation: | School of Humanities, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8020, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Abstract: The 1960s, in Fredric Jameson's analysis, saw a radical re-formulation of global imperialism, with pockets of the 'third world' being incorporated into the first (Jameson 1991, p. 128). On a local level, this implied for colonized peoples a re-negotiation of social space in the face of urbanization. One culture's civilizing mission becomes another's grid of control, resulting in ghettoization, the marginalization of 'abject zones' where the visibility of the clean and proper city is suspended. This paper examines the case of Christchurch, where the garden as an index to civility becomes a paradoxical veneer in the face of biculturalism and decolonization. |
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Keywords: | abject space biculturalism decolonization prison |
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