"Kinshasa: Tales of the Invisible City offers an original analysis of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s capital, Kinshasa. The authors, anthropologist Filip De Boeck and photographer Marie-Françoise Plissart, provide a history not only of the physical and visible urban reality that Kinshasa presents today, but also of a second, invisible city as it exists in the autochthonous mind and imagination in the form of a mirroring reality lurking underneath the surface of the visible world. The book explores the constant transactions that take place between these two levels in Kinshasa’s urban scape. Based on longstanding field research it provides insight in local social and cultural imaginaries, and thus in the imaginative ways in which local ur...
Kinshasa, the former Léopoldville, developed in less than one century from a few pre-colonial settle...
In 2019, Kinshasa counts some thirteen million inhabitants. By 2075, demographers expect that it wil...
What does the nebulous idea of living together in a place such as Kinshasa mean? And what is the rol...
Focusing upon the ‘urban now’, a moment suspended between lingering precolonial references, the brok...
As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselve...
In this selection, from Tim Edensor and Mark Jayne’s Urban Theory Beyond the West (2011) urban anthr...
exploration of the urbanscape of the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, an evocative a...
The Democratic Republic of Congo often calls up images of the Heart of Darkness, where death arrives...
Short Abstract Building upon recent ethnographic work with land chiefs in Kinshasa,this papers exp...
Anthropologist Filip De Boeck and Photographer Sammy Baloji reflect upon their collaborative researc...
This exhibition by photographer Sammy Baloji and anthropologist Filip De Boeck offers an exploration...
In Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of Africa’s most vibrant urban env...
In response to Filip De Boeck’s 2004 thesis that Kinshasa’s urbanity exists “beyond the city’s archi...
This book presents a survey of the architectural and urban legacy of the city of Kinshasa (Democrati...
The Belgian anthropologist Filip De Boeck will speak about some of the ideas underlying Suturing the...
Kinshasa, the former Léopoldville, developed in less than one century from a few pre-colonial settle...
In 2019, Kinshasa counts some thirteen million inhabitants. By 2075, demographers expect that it wil...
What does the nebulous idea of living together in a place such as Kinshasa mean? And what is the rol...
Focusing upon the ‘urban now’, a moment suspended between lingering precolonial references, the brok...
As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselve...
In this selection, from Tim Edensor and Mark Jayne’s Urban Theory Beyond the West (2011) urban anthr...
exploration of the urbanscape of the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, an evocative a...
The Democratic Republic of Congo often calls up images of the Heart of Darkness, where death arrives...
Short Abstract Building upon recent ethnographic work with land chiefs in Kinshasa,this papers exp...
Anthropologist Filip De Boeck and Photographer Sammy Baloji reflect upon their collaborative researc...
This exhibition by photographer Sammy Baloji and anthropologist Filip De Boeck offers an exploration...
In Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of Africa’s most vibrant urban env...
In response to Filip De Boeck’s 2004 thesis that Kinshasa’s urbanity exists “beyond the city’s archi...
This book presents a survey of the architectural and urban legacy of the city of Kinshasa (Democrati...
The Belgian anthropologist Filip De Boeck will speak about some of the ideas underlying Suturing the...
Kinshasa, the former Léopoldville, developed in less than one century from a few pre-colonial settle...
In 2019, Kinshasa counts some thirteen million inhabitants. By 2075, demographers expect that it wil...
What does the nebulous idea of living together in a place such as Kinshasa mean? And what is the rol...