Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin - Institut für Europäische Ethnologie

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Institut für Europäische Ethnologie | Promovieren und Habilitieren | Habilitationsprojekte | Dr. Tomás Criado – An Uncommon City: Bodily Diversity and the Activation of Possible Urbanisms

Dr. Tomás Criado – An Uncommon City: Bodily Diversity and the Activation of Possible Urbanisms

Ramón y Cajal Senior Research Fellow, CareNet-IN3, Open University of Catalonia in Barcelona (Spain).

Abstract

This book is an anthropological exploration of bodily diversity and its impact in the material and knowledge politics of city-making. Drawing on field and archival work of independent-living and disability rights movements, paying attention in particular to their urban accessibilkity struggles as well as their pedagogic interventions in the training of architects, city planners, and designers (with materials from Barcelona, Munich, and Berlin), I trace a wealth of activist initiatives caring for an epistemic, material and political activation of urban design. These initiatives have or had at their core the production of singular situations—made out of policy documents and building codes, infrastructures and standards, collaborative design processes and prototypes, and manifold sensitising devices and documentation interfaces—through which designing technologies, urban landscapes or institutions and political spaces is to be attempted from the appreciation and articulation of bodily diversity: from the demographic identification of bodily patterns to the invention of inclusive and universal design, also connecting with the contested history of urban accessibility struggles, or the perpetual emergence of many access issues in contemporary forms of city-making where bodily diversity appears as the main concern to address by different actors. In particular, the book wishes to unfold three ways – (i) activating prototypes, (ii) activating public infrastructures, and (iii) activating design studio projects – in which a concern with bodily diversity mobilises the uncommon prospects of the city, opening up other possible urbanisms.

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