‘What sort of collective life and what sort of knowledge is to be gathered (...) once modernity has been thrown into doubt while the task of finding the ways to cohabit remains more important than ever?” (Latour, 2005, Reassembling the Social, pp. 16-17) Filip De Boeck’s presentation takes this question to Central Africa’s urban worlds. Based on recent ethnographic data from Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, this presentation will reflect upon the changing connotations of what constitutes the public sphere and the meaning of the categories of public and private, of ‘publics’ and of diversity in the urban locale. It will explore how, in the megalopolis that Kinshasa is, various publics from within and across variou...
International Conference of the Research Network on Religion, AIDS and Social Transformation in Afri...
The contemporary urban landscape of Kinshasa is scattered with numerous billboards presenting shiny ...
Kinshasa, the former Léopoldville, developed in less than one century from a few pre-colonial settle...
‘What sort of collective life and what sort of knowledge is to be gathered (...) once modernity has ...
Nordic Africa Institute Theme for spring 2014: Moral communities in transforming African cities In ...
The development of the sub-Saharan African large cities peripheries is marked by sprawl, excess and ...
To celebrate the ten-year anniversary of the establishment of the African Centre for Cities at the U...
Kinshasa, the capital of the DRCongo, is a city that counts amongst the African continent’s largest ...
In this selection, from Tim Edensor and Mark Jayne’s Urban Theory Beyond the West (2011) urban anthr...
Filip De Boeck talks about his collaboration with Congolese photographer Sammy Baloji. Their joint r...
All over the world, but especially in the Global South, cities expand at a high pace with as a resul...
In Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of Africa’s most vibrant urban env...
Focusing upon the ‘urban now’, a moment suspended between lingering precolonial references, the brok...
Short Abstract Building upon recent ethnographic work with land chiefs in Kinshasa,this papers exp...
As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselve...
International Conference of the Research Network on Religion, AIDS and Social Transformation in Afri...
The contemporary urban landscape of Kinshasa is scattered with numerous billboards presenting shiny ...
Kinshasa, the former Léopoldville, developed in less than one century from a few pre-colonial settle...
‘What sort of collective life and what sort of knowledge is to be gathered (...) once modernity has ...
Nordic Africa Institute Theme for spring 2014: Moral communities in transforming African cities In ...
The development of the sub-Saharan African large cities peripheries is marked by sprawl, excess and ...
To celebrate the ten-year anniversary of the establishment of the African Centre for Cities at the U...
Kinshasa, the capital of the DRCongo, is a city that counts amongst the African continent’s largest ...
In this selection, from Tim Edensor and Mark Jayne’s Urban Theory Beyond the West (2011) urban anthr...
Filip De Boeck talks about his collaboration with Congolese photographer Sammy Baloji. Their joint r...
All over the world, but especially in the Global South, cities expand at a high pace with as a resul...
In Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, one of Africa’s most vibrant urban env...
Focusing upon the ‘urban now’, a moment suspended between lingering precolonial references, the brok...
Short Abstract Building upon recent ethnographic work with land chiefs in Kinshasa,this papers exp...
As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselve...
International Conference of the Research Network on Religion, AIDS and Social Transformation in Afri...
The contemporary urban landscape of Kinshasa is scattered with numerous billboards presenting shiny ...
Kinshasa, the former Léopoldville, developed in less than one century from a few pre-colonial settle...