
Description
Gone to Ground is an investigation into the material and political forces that transformed the cityscape of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania in the 1970s and early 1980s. It is both the story of a particular city and the history of a global moment of massive urban transformation from the perspective of those at the center of this shift. Built around an archive of newspapers, oral history interviews, planning documents, and a broad compendium of development reports, Emily Brownell writes about how urbanites navigated the state's anti-urban planning policies along with the city's fracturing infrastructures and profound shortages of staple goods to shape Dar's environment. They did so most frequently by "going to ground" in the urban periphery, orienting their lives to the city's outskirts where they could plant small farms, find building materials, produce charcoal, and escape the state's policing of urban space.
Taking seriously as historical subject the daily hurdles of families to find housing, food, transportation, and space in the city, these quotidian concerns are drawn into conversation with broader national and transnational anxieties about the oil crisis, resource shortages, infrastructure, and African socialism. In bringing these concerns together into the same frame, Gone to Ground considers how the material and political anxieties of the era were made manifest in debates about building materials, imported technologies, urban agriculture, energy use, and who defines living and laboring in the city.
Product Details
Publisher | University of Pittsburgh Press |
Publish Date | March 10, 2020 |
Pages | 278 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780822946113 |
Dimensions | 9.1 X 6.3 X 1.1 inches | 1.1 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
Brownell makes a compelling case for the ways that residents' everyday acts of provisioning shaped the city's infrastructure and environment.-- "H-Net Reviews"
Emily Brownell's Gone to Ground is a brilliant, landmark study of Dar es Salaam in the 1970s and 80s.-- "Technology and Culture"
Emily Brownell's Gone to Ground offers a major contribution to the academic literature on Africa's recent urban history. It marks an important conceptual advance in this field by both theorizing and demonstrating how Dar es Salaam's population repurposed the material environment of the city and its surroundings in ways that transcend familiar analytical categories. This was done through popular acts of domestication and transformation of an ostensibly universal urban infrastructure that were refitted to local means and practices. Brownell makes a persuasive case that the 1970s and 1980s period was the most decisive in shaping what the city of Dar es Salaam has become today, and does so by rejecting still-dominant normative frames of urban 'failure' that typify 1970s-era Africa. She shows instead how urban space and livelihood strategies were reshaped by inventive and unpredictable connection-making between African residents and their built environment.--James Brennan, University of Illinois
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