Women’s everyday lives and mass-produced social housing: the case of Hacienda Santa Fé in Guadalajara’s Metropolitan Area, Mexico
Women’s everyday lives and mass-produced social housing: the case of Hacienda Santa Fé in Guadalajara’s Metropolitan Area, Mexico
Categories: Lectures and Seminars | Intended for Anyone
2017 Dunton Tower
1125 Colonel By Dr, Ottawa, ON
Contact Information
Mark Anderson, 6135202600, Mark.Anderson@Carleton.ca
Registration
No registration required.
Cost
Free
About this Event
Host Organization: Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Department of History
Over the past 20 years, mass-produced housing complexes have led the expansion of urban peripheries in Mexico. This kind of housing production is characterized by the state assuming the primary role as an economic facilitator for housing production and acquisition, while private developers are left in charge of executing the physical construction of housing, which is a clear expression of neoliberal urbanism. This approach to social housing is primarily focused on the quantitative production of private houses, neglecting other factors necessary for the development of adequate urban habitat.
In this presentation, Paulina will examine the gendered dimensions of neoliberal urbanism and social reproduction by exploring women's "emblematic spaces" of their everyday lives in mass-produced social housing complexes in Mexico. By "emblematic spaces" she refers to the places where women live, shop, work, relax, and relate to others. Unlike the urban development tendency that separates space by its function (e.g. housing, commerce, work, and so forth), the exploration of emblematic spaces demonstrates that daily life brings together a myriad of separate functions. They reveal the relational nature of activities that women have to manage on a daily basis. Through the study of emblematic spaces, this presentation will offer insights on the particular implications that living in a mass-produced housing complex has on women's experiences of everyday life.