by Ananya Roy, 2003
Housing developments emerge amid the paddy fields on the fringes of
Calcutta; overflowing trains carry peasant women to informal urban
labor markets in a daily commute against hunger; land is settled and
claimed in a complex choreography of squatting and evictions: such,
Ananya Roy contends, are the distinctive spaces of a communism for the
new millennium—where, at a moment of liberalization, the hegemony of
poverty is quietly reproduced. An ethnography of urban development in
Calcutta, Roy's book explores the dynamics of class and gender in the
persistence of poverty.
City Requiem, Calcutta emphasizes how gender
itself is spatialized, and how gender relations are negotiated within
the geopolitics of modernity and through the everyday practices of
territory.
Thus Roy shows how urban developmentalism, in its populist
guise, reproduces the relations of masculinist patronage, and, in its
entrepreneurial guise, seeks to reclaim a bourgeois Calcutta,
gentlemanly in its nostalgias. In doing so, her work expands the field
of poverty studies by showing how a politics of poverty is also a
poverty of knowledge, a construction and management of social and
spatial categories.
http://www.upress.umn.edu/Books/R/roy_city.html
This book is online here.