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Infrastructure as a divination tool: Whispers from the grids in a Nigerian city

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  • Eric Trovalla
  • Ulrika Trovalla

Abstract

In the Nigerian city of Jos, everyday life is shaped by interlacing rhythms of disconnection and reconnection. Petrol, electricity, water, etc., come and go, and in order to gain access inhabitants constantly try to discern the logics behind these fluctuations. However, the unpredictable infrastructure also becomes a system of signs through which residents try to understand issues beyond those immediately at hand. Signals, pipes, wires and roads link individuals to larger wholes, and the character of these connections informs and transforms experiences of the social world. Not only an object, but also a means of divination, infrastructure is a harbinger of truths about elusive and mutable social entities-neighbourhoods, cities, nations and beyond. Through the materiality of infrastructure, its flows and glitches carefully read by the inhabitants, an increasingly disjointed city emerges. Through new experiences of differentiated modes of connectedness-of no longer sharing the same roads, pipes, electricity lines, etc.-narratives are formed around lost common trajectories. By focusing on how wires, pipes and roads are turned into a divination system-how the inhabitants of Jos try to divine the city's infrastructure and possible ways forward, as well as how they try, through the infrastructure, to predict a city, a nation and a world beyond-this paper strives to find ways to grasp a thickness of urban becomings-a cityness on the move according to its own unique logic.

Suggested Citation

  • Eric Trovalla & Ulrika Trovalla, 2015. "Infrastructure as a divination tool: Whispers from the grids in a Nigerian city," City, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 19(2-3), pages 332-343, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:cityxx:v:19:y:2015:i:2-3:p:332-343
    DOI: 10.1080/13604813.2015.1018061
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    Cited by:

    1. Seth Schindler & Nancy Duong Nguyen & Desdery Gerase Barongo, 2021. "Transformative top-down planning in a small African city: How residents in Bagamoyo, Tanzania connect with a city in motion," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 39(2), pages 336-353, March.
    2. Liza Rose Cirolia & Suraya Scheba, 2019. "Towards a multi-scalar reading of informality in Delft, South Africa: Weaving the ‘everyday’ with wider structural tracings," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 56(3), pages 594-611, February.

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