Apocalyptic Urban Surrealism in the City at the End of the World

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

Apocalyptic Urban Surrealism in the City at the End of the World. / Wilson, Japhy.
In: Urban Studies, Vol. 60, No. 4, 03.2023, p. 718-733.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

APA

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Wilson J. Apocalyptic Urban Surrealism in the City at the End of the World. Urban Studies. 2023 Mar;60(4):718-733. Epub 2022 Sept 5. doi: 10.1177/00420980221118817

Author

Wilson, Japhy. / Apocalyptic Urban Surrealism in the City at the End of the World. In: Urban Studies. 2023 ; Vol. 60, No. 4. pp. 718-733.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Apocalyptic Urban Surrealism in the City at the End of the World

AU - Wilson, Japhy

PY - 2023/3

Y1 - 2023/3

N2 - This paper responds to calls for radical experimentation in urban theory in the context of the material and psychological upheavals of Anthropocene. It does so through the development of an apocalyptic urban surrealism, based on a set of principles drawn from surrealist attempts to simulate the experience of reality characteristic of psychotic breakdown. These principles are put to work in the psychogeographical exploration of an urban resettlement scheme on the outskirts of Iquitos in the Peruvian Amazon, and the flooded informal settlement that this scheme seeks to replace. Through the relinquishment of established modes of academic sense-making, and their replacement with a surrealist interpretive delirium, alternative meanings emerge within the entrails of cannibal capitalism and the wreckage of state-regulated reality.

AB - This paper responds to calls for radical experimentation in urban theory in the context of the material and psychological upheavals of Anthropocene. It does so through the development of an apocalyptic urban surrealism, based on a set of principles drawn from surrealist attempts to simulate the experience of reality characteristic of psychotic breakdown. These principles are put to work in the psychogeographical exploration of an urban resettlement scheme on the outskirts of Iquitos in the Peruvian Amazon, and the flooded informal settlement that this scheme seeks to replace. Through the relinquishment of established modes of academic sense-making, and their replacement with a surrealist interpretive delirium, alternative meanings emerge within the entrails of cannibal capitalism and the wreckage of state-regulated reality.

U2 - 10.1177/00420980221118817

DO - 10.1177/00420980221118817

M3 - Article

VL - 60

SP - 718

EP - 733

JO - Urban Studies

JF - Urban Studies

SN - 0042-0980

IS - 4

ER -