Description
The lingering scent of food served in small restaurants, the clattering sounds of commuter trains running along the tracks accompanied by a slight shaking of the uneven road — these and many more sensations are transmitted via the medium of public urban space. The (un-)determined shared spaces enable and channel movements and serve as a canvas on which the everyday urban life is painted. Even though this might sound idyllic, the local public sphere is not limited to harmony and sympathy but is also open to conflict, disturbance and unintended contact.This paper aims at shedding light on the perception and construction of urban spaces and on how these social processes are enacted in Japan. The following questions stand at the center: How does public space as a medium frame perceptions and communication? And how do perceptions and communication construct public space in return? These questions are answered by applying mixed methods such as participant observations, interviews, sense walks and discourse analysis in two urban Tokyo neighborhoods (Kitazawa and Matsubara). In both areas, city planning projects as well as the modification of private railway tracks triggered discussions about how existing and new public spaces should be used, and who is entitled to advocate for them. Inhabitants, shopkeepers, activists and consumers share the streets but perceive the space from different angles and participate in divergent but overlapping discourses. Preliminary findings of the fieldwork conducted during the last months reveal diverse cycles of production of spaces creating a fragmented discursive and spatial landscape.
Period | 12 Dec 2018 |
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Held at | German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ), Japan |
Degree of Recognition | International |