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Weird Exoskeletons: Propositional Politics and the Making of Home in Underground Bucharest

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  • Michele Lancione

Abstract

The article explores the politics of life underground in Bucharest, Romania. It focuses on a tunnel passing under Bucharest's central train station, where a community of drug users and so‐called ‘homeless’ have made a long‐standing home, using a space that many others considered uninhabitable. Relying on extensive ethnographic observations and interviews undertaken within the tunnels, the article traces and illustrates the socio‐material entanglements characterizing life underground. It frames this assemblage of bodies, veins, syringes, substances and various relationships of power and affect, as a ‘propositional politics’ of home and life at the margins. Such a politics speaks of drug addiction and extreme marginalization, but also of a sense of belonging, reciprocal trust and care. In tracing such a politics, the article does not aim to romanticize the status of home in the underground or to treat it as the marginal antithesis of normative homeliness, but to reveal the ways in which an affirmative, self‐grounding politics of home emerges from the immanence of tunnel life within the fabric of the city. As such, the article contributes to debates around homing practices in conditions of uninhabitability and proposes a radical approach to the politics of life at the margins in the contemporary urban.

Suggested Citation

  • Michele Lancione, 2019. "Weird Exoskeletons: Propositional Politics and the Making of Home in Underground Bucharest," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 43(3), pages 535-550, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:bla:ijurrs:v:43:y:2019:i:3:p:535-550
    DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.12787
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    Cited by:

    1. Victoria Habermehl, 2021. "Everyday antagonisms: Organising economic practices in Mercado Bonpland, Buenos Aires," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 39(3), pages 536-554, May.
    2. Enikő Vincze, 2024. "RESIDUALIZED PUBLIC HOUSING IN ROMANIA: Peripheralization of ‘the Social’ and the Racialization of ‘Unhouseables’," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 48(3), pages 403-421, May.
    3. Chiara Cacciotti, 2024. "INHABITING LIMINALITY: The Temporal, Spatial and Experiential Assemblage of Emancipatory Practices in the Lives of Housing Squatters in Rome, Italy," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 48(1), pages 145-160, January.
    4. Ferreri, Mara & Sanyal, Romola, 2022. "Digital informalisation: rental housing, platforms, and the management of risk," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 112794, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
    5. Bruce O’Neill, 2020. "Segmenting the city: McDonald’s, the Metro, and the mobilization of the middle classes underground," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 52(7), pages 1313-1331, October.
    6. Asa Roast, 2024. "Towards weird verticality: The spectacle of vertical spaces in Chongqing," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 61(4), pages 636-653, March.

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