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Cloning colonialism: Residential development,transnational aspiration,and the complexities of postcolonial India
Institution:1. School of Kinesiology, University of British Columbia, Auditorium Annex Rm 156f, 1924 West Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, Canada;2. Department of Sport & Physical Activity, Faculty of Management, Bournemouth University, D164 Dorset House, Fern Barrow, Dorset Bh12 5BB, United Kingdom;3. Department of Kinesiology, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, 2359 SPH Building #2611, College Park, MD 20742, United States;1. World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies, Nyon, Switzerland;2. Nanotechnology & Smart Systems, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California, USA;3. Northwest General Hospital and Medical Center, Peshawar, Pakistan;4. Independent cross-bench member of the House of Lords and Co-Chair, All Party Parliamentary Group on Global Health, London, United Kingdom
Abstract:Within this article, we discuss/unpack a speculative international property development born out of a license agreement between the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and real estate investment company, Anglo Indian. The proposed building of twelve cloned, MCC branded, cricket communities in India–targeted to the consumption-based lifestyles of India’s new middle class–is addressed within the context relational to the political, economic, and cultural rationalities of postcolonial India, shifting power dynamics within the international cricket formation, and the associated re-colonisation of cricket-related spaces/bodies. Anglo Indian’s proposed communities are understood as part of a complex assemblage of national and global forces and relations (including, but certainly not restricted to): transnational gentrification; urban (re)development; and, revised understandings of historical and geographic connections between places, governance, and the politics of be(long)ing in branded spaces. This analysis explicates how Anglo Indian’s idealized community development offers a literal and figurative space for embodied performance of “glocal competence” for consumption-based identity projects of the new Indian middle-class (Brosius, 2010, p. 13) through the somewhat ironic mobilization of colonial spatial logics and cultural aesthetics.
Keywords:Speculative (re)development  Master planned communities  Cricket  New Indian middle class  (Post)colonialism  Urban branding
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