《Sustaining multicultural places from gentrified homogenisation of cities》

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作者
Arunima Saha
来源
CITIES,Vol.120,Issue1,Article 103433
语言
英文
关键字
Gentrification;Cultural displacement;Gentrified homogenisation;Multi-culturalism;Inter-culturalism;Chinatown
作者单位
City profile"}]},{"#name":"title","$":{"id":"ti0005"},"_":"Sustaining multicultural places from gentrified homogenisation of cities"}],"floats":[],"footnotes":[],"attachments":[]},"vol-first":"120","vol-iss-suppl-text":"Volume 120","userSettings":{"forceAbstract":false,"creditCardPurchaseAllowed":true,"blockFullTextForAnonymousAccess":false,"disableWholeIssueDownload":false,"preventTransactionalAccess":false,"preventDocumentDelivery":true},"contentType":"JL","crossmark":true,"document-references":34,"freeHtmlGiven":false,"isThirdParty":false,"userProfile":{"departmentName":"ScienceDirect Guests","accessType":"GUEST","accountId":"228598","webUserId":"12975512","accountName":"ScienceDirect Guests","departmentId":"291352","userType":"NORMAL","hasMultipleOrganizations":false},"access":{"openAccess":false,"openArchive":false},"aipType":"none","articleEntitlement":{"entitled":true,"isCasaUser":false,"usageInfo":"(12975512,U|291352,D|228598,A|3,P|2,PL)(SDFE,CON|c94406dd2b931748647b2885b414260d83e3gxrqa,SSO|ANON_GUEST,ACCESS_TYPE)"},"crawlerInformation":{"canCrawlPDFContent":false,"isCrawler":false},"dates":{"Available online":"20 September 2021","Received":"18 April 2021","Revised":["31 July 2021"],"Accepted":"31 August 2021","Publication date":"1 January 2022","Version of Record":"2 December 2021"},"displayViewFullText":false,"downloadFullIssue":true,"entitlementReason":"samplecopy","hasBody":true,"hasScholarlyAbstract":true,"headerConfig":{"contactUrl":"https://service.elsevier.com/app/contact/supporthub/sciencedirect/","userName":"","userEmail":"","orgName":"ScienceDirect Guests","webUserId":"12975512","libraryBanner":{},"shib_regUrl":"","tick_regUrl":"","recentInstitutions":[],"canActivatePersonalization":false,"hasInstitutionalAssociation":false,"hasMultiOrg":false,"userType":"GUEST","userAnonymity":"ANON_GUEST","allowCart":true,"environment":"prod","cdnAssetsHost":"https://sdfestaticassets-us-east-1.sciencedirectassets.com"},"isCorpReq":false,"issn":"02642751","issn-primary-formatted":"0264-2751","issRange":"","pageCount":20,"pdfDownload":{"linkType":"DOWNLOAD","isPdfFullText":false,"urlMetadata":{"queryParams":{"md5":"a6fba69f3744873c0a3dca36a20c5a43","pid":"1-s2.0-S0264275121003322-main.pdf"},"pii":"S0264275121003322","pdfExtension":"/pdfft","path":"science/article/pii"}},"pdfEmbed":false,"publication-content":{"noElsevierLogo":false,"imprintPublisher":{"displayName":"Pergamon","id":"67"},"isSpecialIssue":false,"isSampleIssue":true,"transactionsBlocked":false,"publicationOpenAccess":{"oaStatus":"","oaArticleCount":213,"openArchiveStatus":false,"openArchiveArticleCount":0,"openAccessStartDate":"","oaAllowsAuthorPaid":true},"issue-cover":{"attachment":[{"attachment-eid":"1-s2.0-S0264275121X0011X-cov200h.gif","file-basename":"cov200h","extension":"gif","filename":"cov200h.gif","ucs-locator":["https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/prod-ucs-content-store-eu-west/content/pii:S0264275121X0011X/cover/DOWNSAMPLED200/image/gif/1b7f0cdf93a417c713765d4e17669dd7/cov200h.gif"],"attachment-type":"IMAGE-COVER-H200","filesize":"14829","pixel-height":"200","pixel-width":"150"},{"attachment-eid":"1-s2.0-S0264275121X0011X-cov150h.gif","file-basename":"cov150h","extension":"gif","filename":"cov150h.gif","ucs-locator":["https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/prod-ucs-content-store-eu-west/content/pii:S0264275121X0011X/cover/DOWNSAMPLED/image/gif/b89cedfc1d21229801407154a32dc822/cov150h.gif"],"attachment-type":"IMAGE-COVER-H150","filesize":"9451","pixel-height":"150","pixel-width":"113"}]},"smallCoverUrl":"https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/S02642751.gif","title":"cities","contentTypeCode":"JL","sourceOpenAccess":false,"publicationCoverImageUrl":"https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0264275121X0011X-cov150h.gif"},"useEnhancedReader":true,"volRange":"120","features":["keywords","references","preview"],"titleString":"Sustaining multicultural places from gentrified homogenisation of cities","usesAbstractUrl":true,"renderingMode":"Article","isAbstract":false,"isContentVisible":false,"ajaxLinks":{"citingArticles":true,"referenceLinks":true,"references":true,"referredToBy":true,"toc":true,"body":true,"recommendations":true,"authorMetadata":true},"eligibleForUniversalPdf":false},"authors":{"content":[{"#name":"author-group","$":{"id":"ag0005"},"$$":[{"#name":"author","$":{"id":"au0005","author-id":"S0264275121003322-091268de36290637212039a53bc03a08"},"$$":[{"#name":"given-name","_":"Arunima;Department of Urban Design, School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi, India;Department of Urban Design, School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi, India
摘要
According to Lefebvre's analysis, urbanisation is not only an expansion of urban footprint but, in a broader sense, the radical socio-spatial transformation of society. The cultural setting and its physical manifestation creating distinctive identities within a city are transformed by rapid urbanisation and gentrification. The effects will be analysed in three terms of simultaneous sociocultural-spatial changes; cultural displacement, physical transformation of neighbourhoods, and change in cultural identities. The paper intends to hypothesise whether cultural displacement and altering cultural identities by gentrification and rapid urbanisation will signify gentrified homogenised cities in the future. The paper investigates aspects of multiculturalism and inter-culturalism to mitigate the challenges in sustaining multicultural places in cities. It tries to find the complementary approach of both to generate harmonious multicultural diversities and socio-economic sustainability, keeping the cultural identities intact. One of the examples of rapid urbanisation and gentrification challenging multicultural aspects and altering cultural identities lies in the core of the cultural capital of India, Kolkata in Tangra, Chinatown. The cultural identity of India's only existing Chinatown is changing from 2 to 3 storey live-work based multicultural communities to 30 floors high-rise homogenous gentrified enclaves displacing the diverse cultural communities from the core of the city.