Contentious Cities offers unique interdisciplinary approaches to understanding gendered spatial equity in the urban environment. Positioning design as a central component in how cities produce, construct, represent and materialise gendered spatial practices, it brings together practice and theory to critique, question and enable solutions that challenge the root causes of gender inequalities in cities. Through a rich array of case-studies, practice-led interventions, and historical and theoretical perspectives, it examines important issues that affect the ways in which women, and people of diverse gender and sexual identities experience and participate in cities. Thematically organised, it considers problems of street-harassment, heterosexualisation and equity in access and mobility, together with modes of segregation, isolation and discrimination, as well as processes of resistance, intervention and agency.
Grounded in feminist and queer methods of analysis, the book offers new insights regarding the representation of cities, the lived experience of cities, and how design-tactics and approaches might affect the ways cities shape and regulate how women and people of diverse gender and sexual identity inhabit, occupy and move through the city. An examination of the ways in which design might shift toward safer and more inclusive cities, Contentious Cities will appeal to scholars of sociology, gender studies and urban studies, as well as those working in the fields of urban planning and design.
Contentious Cities : Design and the Gendered Production of Space
Description
Table of Contents
- Introduction: Contentious Cities 2. Colonial Imaginaries Reimagined Preface: Indigenous Ways of Knowing – Brian Martin Visual Essay: 01 Collaboration in Action Part One: Sex on the Streets 3. Introduction: Sex on the Streets 4. Embodied Geographies: Navigating Street Harassment 5. Pornographication and Heterosexualisation in Public Space 6. (In)visible Sites of the Sex Industry: Massage Parlours and the Construction of Space 7. Gender Transport Inequalities in Malaysia and Pakistan: Barriers to Female Mobility 8. A Glitch in the System: Deconstructing JC Decaux: Decoding Suit Supply 9. Lived Experience: Participatory Practices for Gender Sensitive Places and Spaces Visual Essay: 02 Write Now Part Two: Histories of the Gendered City 10. Introduction: Histories of the Gendered City 11. The Non-Sexist City: Then and Now 12. Catwalking the City: The Pleasure and Politics of Fashioning the Metropolis 13. Butch on the Streets: The Butch Flâneur and the Queering of the City 14. Queering Tactics: Two Case Studies in Oakland, California Visual Essay: 03 The [Un]built Part Three: The Trouble with Queer Spaces 15. Introduction: The Trouble with Queer Spaces 16. Queering Architecture: Simona Castricum and Timothy Moore in Conversation 17. Beyond Design Education: Queering Pedagogies of Space 18. Beyond Queer Solidarity in Hong Kong: Migrant Domestic Workers and Trans Spaces 19. Negotiating Gender Diverse Realities Built on Binary Expectations: Public Toilets in Britain Visual Essay: 04 Co-Design Cover
Author Description
Jess Berry is Senior Lecturer in Design History and Theory at Monash University, Australia and the author of House of Fashion: Haute Couture and the Modern Interior.
Timothy Moore is a lecturer in the Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture at Monash University, Australia.
Nicole Kalms is the founding director at XYX Lab and associate professor in the Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture at Monash University, Australia. She is the author of Hypersexual City.
Gene Bawden is a communication designer, Co-director of XYX Lab and head of Design at Monash University, Australia. He is the author of Comfort and Judgement: Nineteenth Century Advice Manuals and the Scripting of Australian Identity.