En Fuite, on Foot, in Thought: Making the Metropolis Elusive
Sally-Ann Murray
Abstract
Achille Mbembe and Sarah Nuttall (eds). 2004. Public Culture 16(3), Special Issue, "Johannesburg: The ElusiveMetropolis". Durham NC: Duke University Press.
The
general claim of "Johannesburg: The Elusive Metropolis" is that
this city isinfluential by virtue of a human possibility presently in
formation. This human potentialis reconfiguring the limitations of the
apartheid spatial inheritance, the volatility of thedemocratic street,
and the apparent superficiality of consumer culture. Among othermatters,
I consider the meanings given, across the volume, to intellectuals
'walking inthe city'; to the metonymic use of 'voice'; to urban
ethnography as a means of embodyingJohannesburg's citiness; to the
omission from the volume of Johannesburg as representedin fiction. These
considerations all enter my argument that affirming 'the
metropolitan'as a preferred marker of modern South African identity is
more complex in itsimplications than is allowed by the essays in this
collection.
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