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City of God.

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City of God. / Diken, Bulent.
In: City, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2005, p. 307-320.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Diken, B 2005, 'City of God.', City, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 307-320. https://doi.org/10.1080/13604810500392589

APA

Vancouver

Diken B. City of God. City. 2005;9(3):307-320. doi: 10.1080/13604810500392589

Author

Diken, Bulent. / City of God. In: City. 2005 ; Vol. 9, No. 3. pp. 307-320.

Bibtex

@article{7c2aa812abc6433eb7940f40f70bd04f,
title = "City of God.",
abstract = "Well over a millennium and a half ago, Augustine distinguished between two cities: the Heavenly City and the Earthly City. While one was the site of all that was holy and spiritual, the place of faith, the other was foul and wicked, the realm of the flesh. Such dichotomies, expanded into a full‐fledged binary logic, persist in the way that we think about cities today. But as B{\"u}lent Diken shows in these reflections on Jo{\~a}o Fernando Meirelles' film—entitled, appropriately enough—City of God, cities today are bound up with the very things they try to exclude: ghettos, slums, and shanty‐towns. Binary urban logics in fact produce more grey than they do black and white. The notorious favela outside of Rio that is the subject of Meirelles' film is simultaneously included and excluded from all that Rio represents. It is at once a dumping ground for the city's byproducts—the (human) waste generated by its own development—and its products. It is a zone beyond the civilized city, which, as the city's inverted, carnivalesque, image, makes the very idea of civilization possible. It is, in other words, the lawless state of exception that proves the law. In this careful and original analysis of Meirelles' stunning film, Diken employs the work of {\v Z}i{\v z}ek and Agamben, among others, to illustrate the ways in which the favela—the state of urban exception, the space supposedly outside the law and outside civilization, where life is reduced to mere existence—is not outside the city, but within its very center. {\textquoteleft}All contemporary urban space,{\textquoteright} Diken explains, {\textquoteleft}is organized according to the logic of the favela{\textquoteright}.",
author = "Bulent Diken",
year = "2005",
doi = "10.1080/13604810500392589",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "307--320",
journal = "City",
issn = "1360-4813",
publisher = "Oxfordshire Publishers",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - City of God.

AU - Diken, Bulent

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - Well over a millennium and a half ago, Augustine distinguished between two cities: the Heavenly City and the Earthly City. While one was the site of all that was holy and spiritual, the place of faith, the other was foul and wicked, the realm of the flesh. Such dichotomies, expanded into a full‐fledged binary logic, persist in the way that we think about cities today. But as Bülent Diken shows in these reflections on João Fernando Meirelles' film—entitled, appropriately enough—City of God, cities today are bound up with the very things they try to exclude: ghettos, slums, and shanty‐towns. Binary urban logics in fact produce more grey than they do black and white. The notorious favela outside of Rio that is the subject of Meirelles' film is simultaneously included and excluded from all that Rio represents. It is at once a dumping ground for the city's byproducts—the (human) waste generated by its own development—and its products. It is a zone beyond the civilized city, which, as the city's inverted, carnivalesque, image, makes the very idea of civilization possible. It is, in other words, the lawless state of exception that proves the law. In this careful and original analysis of Meirelles' stunning film, Diken employs the work of Žižek and Agamben, among others, to illustrate the ways in which the favela—the state of urban exception, the space supposedly outside the law and outside civilization, where life is reduced to mere existence—is not outside the city, but within its very center. ‘All contemporary urban space,’ Diken explains, ‘is organized according to the logic of the favela’.

AB - Well over a millennium and a half ago, Augustine distinguished between two cities: the Heavenly City and the Earthly City. While one was the site of all that was holy and spiritual, the place of faith, the other was foul and wicked, the realm of the flesh. Such dichotomies, expanded into a full‐fledged binary logic, persist in the way that we think about cities today. But as Bülent Diken shows in these reflections on João Fernando Meirelles' film—entitled, appropriately enough—City of God, cities today are bound up with the very things they try to exclude: ghettos, slums, and shanty‐towns. Binary urban logics in fact produce more grey than they do black and white. The notorious favela outside of Rio that is the subject of Meirelles' film is simultaneously included and excluded from all that Rio represents. It is at once a dumping ground for the city's byproducts—the (human) waste generated by its own development—and its products. It is a zone beyond the civilized city, which, as the city's inverted, carnivalesque, image, makes the very idea of civilization possible. It is, in other words, the lawless state of exception that proves the law. In this careful and original analysis of Meirelles' stunning film, Diken employs the work of Žižek and Agamben, among others, to illustrate the ways in which the favela—the state of urban exception, the space supposedly outside the law and outside civilization, where life is reduced to mere existence—is not outside the city, but within its very center. ‘All contemporary urban space,’ Diken explains, ‘is organized according to the logic of the favela’.

U2 - 10.1080/13604810500392589

DO - 10.1080/13604810500392589

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

SP - 307

EP - 320

JO - City

JF - City

SN - 1360-4813

IS - 3

ER -