Infrastructures of Freedom
Public Light and Everynight Life on a Southern City's Margins
Contributor(s)
Briers, Stephanie (editor)
Collection
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)Language
EnglishAbstract
Infrastructures of Freedom sheds light on the impact of inadequate public lighting in self-built communities in Cape Town. In democratic South Africa, where infrastructure provision still reflects deeply embedded notions of citizenship, informal neighborhoods with minimal infrastructure provision face challenges beyond access to basic services and opportunities. Fear, the feeling of being forgotten, and living in undignified conditions are among the powerful experiences darkness brings about in these neighborhoods. The book not only reveals these experiences of everynight life, but takes a step further: it considers how the co-production of a solar public lighting project within a community improved everynight life and suggests ways for infrastructure to more successfully articulate citizenship.
Keywords
post-Apartheid urban planning; public light; darkness; Cape Town; South Africa; Khayelitsha light infrastructure; citizenship; urban segregation; township action research; bottom-up; Apartheid; southern urbanismDOI
10.1515/9783868597806ISBN
9783868597806, 9783868597769, 9783868597806Publisher
De GruyterPublisher website
https://www.degruyter.com/Publication date and place
Berlin/Boston, 2023Imprint
JOVIS Verlag GmbHClassification
Architecture: professional practice
Regional and area planning