Conviviality Is Not Enough: A Communication Perspective to the City of Difference
Author(s) -
Georgiou Myria
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
communication, culture & critique
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.592
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 1753-9137
pISSN - 1753-9129
DOI - 10.1111/cccr.12154
Subject(s) - civility , dialectic , politics , sociology , negotiation , solidarity , multiculturalism , perspective (graphical) , ethnic group , media studies , gender studies , aesthetics , political science , social science , epistemology , anthropology , law , philosophy , pedagogy , artificial intelligence , computer science
This article interrogates the ways in which urban communication enables or prevents politics of conviviality in the multicultural city. A multimethod, primarily qualitative study in a London neighborhood exposed extensive communicative fragmentation along ethnic and class lines. Does such communicative separation lead to segregation? Is togetherness ever possible? Rather than a togetherness/separation binary, our study revealed a dialectic that rests upon diverging distribution of modes of communication in the city: Media often separate urban dwellers and face‐to‐face communication brings them together in momentary but important association. This dialectic and its various incarnations give rise to a spectrum of politics of conviviality: civility through Othering; civility through negotiation of We‐ness and Otherness; and politics of civic engagement and solidarity.
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