ABSTRACT
This volume offers valuable anthropological insight into urban Africa, covering a range of cities across a continent that has become one of the fastest urbanizing geographic areas of the globe.
Consideration is given to the structures, social formations, and rhythms that constitute the definition of an African city, town, or urban space, and to current concepts for thinking about African cities in the twenty-first century. The contributors examine topics including notions of belonging, the effects of globalization, colonialism, and transnationalism on African urban life, the cultural dimensions of infrastructure and public resources, mobility, labor issues, spatial organization, language, and popular culture trends, among other themes.
The book reflects on how the ethnography of urban Africa fits within anthropology and urban studies, and on new theoretical concepts and methodologies that can be created through anthropological fieldwork in African cities. It will be of particular interest to scholars and students from anthropology, African studies and urban studies, as well as sociology and geography.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|14 pages
Introduction
chapter 1|12 pages
Africa and Urban Anthropology
part II|110 pages
Knowing the City and Urban Imaginaries
chapter 3|28 pages
Beyond the Rhodes Livingstone-Institute
chapter 5|24 pages
Mediated Ethnography
chapter 6|22 pages
Class, Cities, and the Multiple-Disposition Habitus
part III|113 pages
Urban Spaces
chapter 8|25 pages
Manantali, Mali
chapter 9|18 pages
Place-Making, Regulatory Politics, and the Roots of Informality in Colonial Accra
chapter 10|27 pages
Beings of Concrete and Steel
chapter 11|24 pages
On “Worlding” Urban Ethnography
part IV|94 pages
Urban Infrastructure and Mobility
chapter 12|23 pages
The Infrastructure of Submarine Urbanism
chapter 13|22 pages
Temporalities of Absence
chapter 15|23 pages
Modernity and the Art of Motorcycle Management
part V|92 pages
Power of Urban Belongingness
chapter 16|19 pages
We Were Running and Running
chapter 18|26 pages
Religious Relevance Interests
part VI|69 pages
Language and the City
part VII|9 pages
Conclusion
