![]() ![]() Studies in this field experienced an active exploration in plural disciplines after 2000, and the hot area gradually concentrated on the discipline of humanities and social sciences after 2010 and shifted toward place marketing until now. The scientometric review reveals the extensive applications of place identity in various topics. The data set input into CiteSpace consists of 1,011 bibliographic records retrieved from the core database of Web of Science with a title search of the articles published between 1985 and July 2019. CiteSpace, a scientometric tool for visualizing and analyzing trends and patterns in scientific literature, is used to identify the active topics and new developments of publications in place identity. In order to synthesize the extensively studied place identities and their meanings, this paper reviews how researchers have conceived and deconstructed place identity. ![]() 2Faculty of Spatial Sciences, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.1College of Public Administration, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing, China.Revealing that the social justice activism in Fruitvale fights for a space that does not yet exist, Herrera brings to life contentious politics about the nature of Chicanismo, Latinidad, and belonging while foregrounding the lasting social and material legacies of movements so often relegated to the past.Jianchao Peng 1* Dirk Strijker 2 Qun Wu 1 Herrera examines the ongoing nature of activism through nonprofit organizations and urban redevelopment projects like the Fruitvale Transit Village that root movements in place. Drawing on oral histories with Chicano activists, ethnography, and archival research, Herrera analyzes how activism has shaped Fruitvale. From Chicano-inspired street murals to the architecture of restaurants and shops, Herrera shows how Fruitvaleās communities and spaces serve as a palpable, living record of movement politics and achievements. In Cartographic Memory, Juan Herrera maps 1960s Chicano movement activism in the Latinx neighborhood of Fruitvale in Oakland, California, showing how activists there constructed a politics forged through productions of space. What are the politics of building intersectional spaces? What identities, institutional formations, and geographical locations are privileged (and/or rendered invisible) in the making of intersectional spaces and movements? The project probes the politics in the making of queer of color geographies. The book questions what it means to conceptualize intersectionality through a spatial framework. My next book focuses on an intersectional and relational analysis of queer of color geographies in Los Angeles. Utilizing rich oral histories, ethnography, and meticulous archival research, I detail how movements transform places, route places to other regions, and mobilize to create an egalitarian futurity. ![]() The book details how movements produce landscapes shaped out of the reconfiguration of social relations and the meeting of multiple historical trajectories-down to the very materiality of transformations in the built environment. My first book, Cartographic Memory: Social Movement Activism and the Production of Space (Duke University Press 2022) examines how social movements mobilize to make changes in actually-existing places. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |