
Description
Erika Robb Larkins shows how favela violence is produced as a marketable global brand. While this violence is projected in disembodied form through media, the favela is also sold as an embodied experience through the popular practice of favela tourism. The commodification of the favela becomes a form of violence itself; favela violence is transformed into a commercially viable byproduct of a profit-driven war on drugs, which serves to keep the poor marginalized. This book tells the story of how traffickers, police, cameras, tourists, and even anthropologists come together to create what the author calls the "spectacular favela."
Product Details
Publisher | University of California Press |
Publish Date | May 01, 2015 |
Pages | 256 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780520282773 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 6.0 X 0.6 inches | 0.8 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Accessible and engaging."-- "Survival: Global Politics and Strategy" (5/26/2016 12:00:00 AM)
"This academic book reads almost like a novel - gripping its reader's attention with a rich array of characters, experiences, and conversations - as it tells the story of Rocinha favela. Yet it is a far cry from a novel. Indeed, the lives it portrays and theoretical dialogue it creates on violence, its spectacle and commodification are of critical importance to further understanding violence in the margins of society, like the favelas of Rio."-- "Environment & Urbanization"
"Through her formulation and appropriation of these terms, Larkins's anthropological treatment of how violence structures relations of coercive power in alternative governance institutions and across territorial scales will be as highly legible to political scientists and sociologists well-schooled in Max Weber's, Charles Tilly's, and Benedict Anderson's writings as to those familiar with anthropology's more cited scholars, including Foucault and Agamben."-- "Latin American Research Review"
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