Lost Pathways of Urban Development

Photographic images from Ho Chi Minh City’s Thủ Thiêm Peninsula draw attention to now-vanished trees and pathways from a place that has been demolished for the sake of urban expansion. The trees and pathways in these photographs evoke an aspect of sociality often overlooked in the logocentric anthro...

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Main Author: Erik Harms
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique 2020-08-01
Series:EchoGéo
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/19671
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author Erik Harms
author_facet Erik Harms
author_sort Erik Harms
collection DOAJ
description Photographic images from Ho Chi Minh City’s Thủ Thiêm Peninsula draw attention to now-vanished trees and pathways from a place that has been demolished for the sake of urban expansion. The trees and pathways in these photographs evoke an aspect of sociality often overlooked in the logocentric anthropological and geographical literature on development-induced evictions. Attention to images draws attention to the history of non-human nature and to lost pathways of urban development, which in turn emphasizes their uses and the practices which maintained them, revealing the interconnection between human sociality and the non-human world. Unlike the "tragedy of the commons," which describes common resources extinguished or depleted by unregulated use, these elements appear as a collective resource, produced and cared for by their users. Reflecting on photographic images taken before and during a period of mass eviction inspires a rethinking of the idea of the commons, crafted through a cultural approach that attends to the material landscape, the role of the non-human in social relationships, and the social production of landscapes.
format Article
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institution Kabale University
issn 1963-1197
language fra
publishDate 2020-08-01
publisher Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique
record_format Article
series EchoGéo
spelling doaj-art-c213a2ab362f4ca59b62b425c59c31872025-01-30T12:43:41ZfraPôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information GéographiqueEchoGéo1963-11972020-08-015210.4000/echogeo.19671Lost Pathways of Urban DevelopmentErik HarmsPhotographic images from Ho Chi Minh City’s Thủ Thiêm Peninsula draw attention to now-vanished trees and pathways from a place that has been demolished for the sake of urban expansion. The trees and pathways in these photographs evoke an aspect of sociality often overlooked in the logocentric anthropological and geographical literature on development-induced evictions. Attention to images draws attention to the history of non-human nature and to lost pathways of urban development, which in turn emphasizes their uses and the practices which maintained them, revealing the interconnection between human sociality and the non-human world. Unlike the "tragedy of the commons," which describes common resources extinguished or depleted by unregulated use, these elements appear as a collective resource, produced and cared for by their users. Reflecting on photographic images taken before and during a period of mass eviction inspires a rethinking of the idea of the commons, crafted through a cultural approach that attends to the material landscape, the role of the non-human in social relationships, and the social production of landscapes.https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/19671Ho Chi Minh CitySaigonThu Thiempathwaytreeeviction
spellingShingle Erik Harms
Lost Pathways of Urban Development
EchoGéo
Ho Chi Minh City
Saigon
Thu Thiem
pathway
tree
eviction
title Lost Pathways of Urban Development
title_full Lost Pathways of Urban Development
title_fullStr Lost Pathways of Urban Development
title_full_unstemmed Lost Pathways of Urban Development
title_short Lost Pathways of Urban Development
title_sort lost pathways of urban development
topic Ho Chi Minh City
Saigon
Thu Thiem
pathway
tree
eviction
url https://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/19671
work_keys_str_mv AT erikharms lostpathwaysofurbandevelopment