“Mongrel City”: cosmopolitan neighbourliness in a Delhi squatter settlement
This paper examines the construction of a "cosmopolitan neighbourliness" which emerges in a Delhi squatter settlement in the context of communal violence. Through interviews with over 80 inhabitants, I suggest that an openness to "others" in the settlement is produced in order to construct a home for oneself in an exclusionary city through a series of relational constructs-between the "cosmopolitan" city and the "parochial" village; between the "murderous" city and the "compassionate" slum; between the exclusionary urban public sphere and the "inclusive" neighbourhood sphere. The squatter settlement is internalised as a microcosm of a "mongrel city", a place which through its set of oppositional constructs becomes inherently "urban". "Cosmopolitan neighbourliness", however, remains fragile and gendered. It is a continuous strategic practice that attempts to bridge across differences of caste and religion through gendered performances that avert and discourage communal violence even when the city becomes murderous.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Departments |
Sociology LSE Cities |
| DOI | 10.1111/j.1467-8330.2011.00928.x |
| Date Deposited | 19 Sep 2011 15:39 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/38291 |
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