By means of an ethnographic “urban acupuncture” of a specific building within the city of Kinshasa, this article explores how poverty effects emerging publics in the city. Poverty “rhythms” city life in specific ways, and these rhythms may be best understood in terms of a politics of the syncopated and the suspended through which urban publics are constantly splintered and reassembled. The suspensions and missed beats that thus punctuate urban daily living often produce violence, closure, and isolation, but simultaneously they also generate unexpected accents that form openings into the “something else” of the offbeat track, thereby hinting at the (always vulnerable and equally problematic) possibility of alternative collective action and t...
The DRC’s capital is set to become Africa’s largest city, but struggles to assert its authority over...
Starting from an ethnography of one of Kinshasa’s main burial grounds, the cemetery of Kintambo, and...
Trends towards ‘informalization’ are looming large in the world today. African cities have long been...
By means of an ethnographic “urban acupuncture” of a specific building within the city of Kinshasa, ...
On the basis of fieldwork in Kinshasa, this essay makes a link between riots, the recent anthropolog...
Drawing on ethnographies of divinatory systems as well as on mathematical theories of the Möbius str...
Ethnic based solidarity systems facilitated the integration of rural migrants into the intricacies o...
As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselve...
The development of the sub-Saharan African large cities peripheries is marked by sprawl, excess and ...
‘What sort of collective life and what sort of knowledge is to be gathered (...) once modernity has ...
The article provides an ethnographic description of social life in and around phonie houses in Kinsh...
Public lecture in the context of Ângela Ferreira’s exhibition Indépendance Cha Cha.The presentation ...
Focusing upon the ‘urban now’, a moment suspended between lingering precolonial references, the brok...
One of the key characteristics of many a colonial city, is its binary spatial structure, in which a ...
International audienceBased on an ethnography conducted in the urban margins of Dakar (Senegal) and ...
The DRC’s capital is set to become Africa’s largest city, but struggles to assert its authority over...
Starting from an ethnography of one of Kinshasa’s main burial grounds, the cemetery of Kintambo, and...
Trends towards ‘informalization’ are looming large in the world today. African cities have long been...
By means of an ethnographic “urban acupuncture” of a specific building within the city of Kinshasa, ...
On the basis of fieldwork in Kinshasa, this essay makes a link between riots, the recent anthropolog...
Drawing on ethnographies of divinatory systems as well as on mathematical theories of the Möbius str...
Ethnic based solidarity systems facilitated the integration of rural migrants into the intricacies o...
As elsewhere on the African continent, Congo’s cities increasingly imagine new futures for themselve...
The development of the sub-Saharan African large cities peripheries is marked by sprawl, excess and ...
‘What sort of collective life and what sort of knowledge is to be gathered (...) once modernity has ...
The article provides an ethnographic description of social life in and around phonie houses in Kinsh...
Public lecture in the context of Ângela Ferreira’s exhibition Indépendance Cha Cha.The presentation ...
Focusing upon the ‘urban now’, a moment suspended between lingering precolonial references, the brok...
One of the key characteristics of many a colonial city, is its binary spatial structure, in which a ...
International audienceBased on an ethnography conducted in the urban margins of Dakar (Senegal) and ...
The DRC’s capital is set to become Africa’s largest city, but struggles to assert its authority over...
Starting from an ethnography of one of Kinshasa’s main burial grounds, the cemetery of Kintambo, and...
Trends towards ‘informalization’ are looming large in the world today. African cities have long been...