Description
Focusing on this tripartite relationship between architecture, security, and technology, the text provides examples from urban spaces in both the global north and south, which: discipline the mobility and movement of populations, as well as reinforce socioeconomic cleavages. They examine borders and borderlands, airports and ports of entry, and the borderscape of the Sonoran Desert, which exemplify often inhumane examples of ferocious sovereign power. Other cases look at concealed ferocity in the form of databases, social sorting, and surveillance regimes. It looks at the politics of sound in the airport as a disciplining mechanism and the fluid space of teargas as an allegedly "non-lethal" but nonetheless ferocious tool of crowd control and disciplinary power. It touches on the management and design of spaces for to facilitate and control those suffering from dementia; the politics of the bulldozer, as ferocious destroyer of design; and the curated ferocious politics of memory, and the manner in which the museum can exhibit a crisis of memory, attempting to conceal both contemporary and historic ferocity.
About the Author
Benjamin J. Muller is Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, King's University College. Can E. Mutlu is Associate Professor at Arcadia University.
Book Information
ISBN 9781786612229
Author Benjamin J. Muller
Format Hardback
Page Count 200
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield International
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield International