The Violent Beauty of a Banlieue Wasteland Garden

Forfattere

  • Sarah Harper

Nøgleord:

Violence, Suburbs, Participatory arts, Riot, Urbanism, Street codes

Resumé

Participatory arts can invite stormy and violent forms of participation when they are commissioned for sites where frustration, territorial control and pre-emptive self-defense involve practices of accepted street codes by those living within racialized, febrile territories. Through the case study of Aroma Home, a participatory art gardening project, in Paris’s northern peripheries, I analyze instances of affective, symbolic, performative and territorial violence as non-normative political acts of participation. Examining the underlying contexts and logics that led to these incidents, I argue that the most insidious act of violence in the project was the creation of our invasive, extractive garden on a hitherto unclaimed and unidentified patch of ‘free’ public ground. In creating a new identity for this wasteland and defining its use, we effectively limited, and implicitly prescribed, modes of participation that were culturally alien to those we most wanted to involve.

Downloads

Publiceret

2024-06-27

Citation/Eksport

Harper, S. (2024). The Violent Beauty of a Banlieue Wasteland Garden. Conjunctions. Transdisciplinary Journal of Cultural Participation, 11(2), 1–18. Hentet fra https://tidsskrift.dk/tcp/article/view/147211

Nummer

Sektion

Peer Reviewed Research Articles: Theme Section