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City Rhythms: Urban Mobility Relations in Ho Chi Minh City

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 09:33 authored by Catherine EarlCatherine Earl
Moving beyond a rhythmanalysis approach to banal mobilities and diurnal journey making – commuting, visiting, shopping, leisure – this paper explores how place-dependent forms of transport shape the feel and flow of the city. Theorizing the city as polyrhythmic reveals multiple traces of local/global and past/present in the socio-historically situatedness of urban mobilities. Based on 20 months of ethnographic fieldwork in Ho Chi Minh City, I reconsider the dis/orderliness of different movements in the mega-urban postcolonial Global South. The paper's main arguments are arranged around the thick description of a scene in HCMC's everyday traffic flows as experienced from the curbside of one of the city's busy streets. I draw on concepts from avant guard musical composition to rethink the de-synchronization and disharmony of congested roads as polyrhythmic relations. Firstly, I deploy the concept of aleatory to offer an alternative explanation for unpredictable elements in metropolitan traffic flow. Secondly, I apply the concept of phasing, or syncing, to sensory experiences of roads to explore co-production of polyrhythmic relations. Thirdly, I reflect on isorhythmia and stochastic processes to analyze influences of models of digitization on repetition and randomness in mobilities.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1111/ciso.12459
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 08930465

Journal

City and Society

Volume

35

Start page

89

End page

100

Total pages

12

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2023 The Author. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) License

Former Identifier

2006124163

Esploro creation date

2023-08-30

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