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oapen-20.500.12657-585152022-09-24T03:52:29Z Chapter 13 The Porous Infrastructures of Somali Malls in Cape Town Tayob, Huda Infrastructure, cape town, somali malls, architecture, global perspectives bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AM Architecture This chapter takes as its subject a series of contingent mixed-use urban markets that have been established in Cape Town, South Africa, by migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers from various parts of the African continent. Known colloquially as ‘Somali malls,’ these markets typically occupy once-vacant or underused office blocks, filling them with multiple small shops, services, and residences. Read through the lens of infrastructure, these spaces of flows tie Somali diasporic communities into transnational networks of sociality and exchange. Through novel forms of organization, procurement, display, and hospitality, proprietors optimize the spaces internally within buildings while at the same time constructing networks that exceed the building envelope, creating a flexible, multiscalar set of practices. Women comprise the large majority of traders in the Somali malls, carving out spaces not only for merchandising and earning a living, but also for the construction of migrant sociality in a new and unfamiliar world. This research approach is grounded in broader anthropological approaches and architectural fieldwork methods. The resultant multiscalar reading of informal migrant markets, not usually found in spatial archives, questions dominant readings of infrastructures in post-colonial contexts. 2022-09-23T08:59:56Z 2022-09-23T08:59:56Z 2022 chapter 9780367554910 9781032188393 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/58515 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003093756_10.4324_9781003093756-18.pdf Taylor & Francis The Routledge Handbook of Infrastructure Design Routledge 10.4324/9781003093756-18 10.4324/9781003093756-18 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb e3a21a4c-17f0-4750-b260-6a16bda32471 a897f645-c917-4be8-a0db-e8b3f64cac47 9780367554910 9781032188393 Routledge 11 University of Manchester open access
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This chapter takes as its subject a series of contingent mixed-use urban markets that have been established in Cape Town, South Africa, by migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers from various parts of the African continent. Known colloquially as ‘Somali malls,’ these markets typically occupy once-vacant or underused office blocks, filling them with multiple small shops, services, and residences. Read through the lens of infrastructure, these spaces of flows tie Somali diasporic communities into transnational networks of sociality and exchange. Through novel forms of organization, procurement, display, and hospitality, proprietors optimize the spaces internally within buildings while at the same time constructing networks that exceed the building envelope, creating a flexible, multiscalar set of practices. Women comprise the large majority of traders in the Somali malls, carving out spaces not only for merchandising and earning a living, but also for the construction of migrant sociality in a new and unfamiliar world. This research approach is grounded in broader anthropological approaches and architectural fieldwork methods. The resultant multiscalar reading of informal migrant markets, not usually found in spatial archives, questions dominant readings of infrastructures in post-colonial contexts.
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9781003093756_10.4324_9781003093756-18.pdf
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9781003093756_10.4324_9781003093756-18.pdf
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9781003093756_10.4324_9781003093756-18.pdf
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9781003093756_10.4324_9781003093756-18.pdf
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9781003093756_10.4324_9781003093756-18.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2022
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1771297485223886848
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