ABSTRACT

The social and material production of urban nature has recently emerged as an important area in urban studies, human/environmental interactions and social studies. This has been prompted by the recognition that the material conditions that comprise urban environments are not independent from social, political, and economic processes, or from the cultural construction of what constitutes the ‘urban’ or the ‘natural’. Through both theoretical and empirical analysis, this groundbreaking collection offers an integrated and relational approach to untangling the interconnected processes involved in forming urban landscapes.

The essays in this book attest that the re-entry of the ecological agenda into urban theory is vital both in terms of understanding contemporary urbanization processes, and of engaging in a meaningful environmental politics. They debate the central themes of whose nature is, or becomes, urbanized, and the uneven power relations through which this socio-metabolic transformation takes place.

Including urban case studies, international research and contributions from prominent urban scholars, this volume will enable students, scholars and researchers of geographical, environmental and urban studies to better understand how interrelated, everyday economic, political and cultural processes form and transform urban environments.

chapter 1|20 pages

Urban political ecology: politicizing the production of urban natures

ByNIK HEYNEN, MARIA KAIKA, ERIK SWYNGEDOUW

chapter 2|20 pages

Metabolic urbanization: the making of cyborg cities

ByERIK SWYNGEDOUW

chapter 3|22 pages

Metropolitics and metabolics: rolling out environmentalism in Toronto

ByROGER KEIL AND JULIE-ANNE BOUDREAU

chapter 4|12 pages

Urban nature and the ecological imaginary

ByMATTHEW GANDY

chapter 5|18 pages

Nature’s carnival: the ecology of pleasure at Coney Island

ByELIZA DARLING

chapter 7|19 pages

Turfgrass subjects: the political economy of urban monoculture

ByPAUL ROBBINS, JULIE SHARP

chapter 9|14 pages

Metabolisms of obe-city: flows of fat through bodies, cities and sewers

BySIMON MARVIN, WILL MEDD

chapter 12|17 pages

The public/private conundrum of urban water: a view from South Africa

BySouth Africa LAILA SMITH AND GREG RUITERS