Technopolitics and Tenderloins: Sanitation Reform, Segregation, and the Making of Storyville, New Orleans

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Pub Date : 2024-09-18 DOI:10.1007/s41636-024-00521-8
Elizabeth Williams, D. Ryan Gray
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Abstract

Nikhil Anand (2020:50), in a discussion of the modernization of water systems in Mumbai, conceptualizes urban infrastructure as a network of “political assemblages” that can be deconstructed to understand how power is articulated within spaces. Following Anand, we analyze the technopolitics of utility infrastructure and waste disposal in the New Orleans neighborhood that became Storyville, the city’s famed red-light district (1897–1917). Storyville, as a byproduct of the city’s Progressive Era efforts to engineer physically and morally salubrious urban spaces, was built on an inherent contradiction: it attempted to racially segregate social space, even as it also reserved sex across the color line as a privilege of white men. The material record helps to demonstrate the dissonance between the facades of the imagined Storyville and the diversity of everyday life there, even as that dissonance has reverberated through cycles of urban redevelopment in the neighborhood during the century since the district closed.

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技术政治与贫民窟:卫生改革、种族隔离与新奥尔良 Storyville 的形成
尼基尔-阿南德(Nikhil Anand,2020:50)在讨论孟买供水系统的现代化时,将城市基础设施概念化为一个 "政治组合 "网络,通过对其进行解构,可以了解权力是如何在空间中得到体现的。继阿南德之后,我们分析了新奥尔良的公用事业基础设施和垃圾处理的技术政治学,新奥尔良的Storyville社区就是该市著名的红灯区(1897-1917 年)。斯托里维尔是进步时代该市努力打造物质和道德双丰收的城市空间的副产品,它的建设是建立在一个内在矛盾之上的:它试图隔离种族社会空间,同时也将跨越肤色界限的性行为保留为白人男性的特权。物质记录有助于证明想象中的故事村的外貌与日常生活的多样性之间的不和谐,甚至在故事村关闭后的一个世纪里,这种不和谐还在该街区的城市再开发周期中回荡。
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来源期刊
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY ARCHAEOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
65
期刊介绍: Historical Archaeology is the scholarly journal of The Society for Historical Archaeology (SHA) and the leading journal in the study of the archaeology of the modern era. The journal publishes articles on a broad range of historic and archaeological areas of interests such as slavery, gender, race, ethnicity, social class, globalization, industry, landscapes, material culture, battlefields, and much more.   Historical Archaeology is published quarterly and is a benefit of SHA membership.  The journal was first published in 1967, the year SHA was founded. Although most contributors and reviewers are member of the Society, membership is not required to submit manuscripts for publication in Historical Archaeology.  Scholarship and pertinence are the determining factors in selecting contribution for publication in SHA’s journal.
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