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Conference

French

ID: <

2268/261553

>

Where these data come from
Urban textures and pandemics: regional views

Abstract

Our intervention will first seek to propose a framing of the concept of ‘pandering’, addressing it more closely for its link with urban registration sites. COVID-19 has given rise to an abundance of rulings in urban public spaces, which raise questions from a different point of view: the anchoring of the system, the construction of more or less different bodies, but also the relationship with the procedures and procedures for registration. This framework will be used as evidence of a corpus of urban registration, which combines with the county and collection between March 2020 and April 2021 (about 250 of the photographic titles). This collection is part of a wider mapping project for street rulings, whose methodology and challenges will be explained. As a first step, this body will be examined from a quantitative point of view, which will make it possible to identify a number of major trends (in particular linked to the location of inscriptions), but also to mark the limits of an approach which, in the case of pandomic nonciations, can lead to overly expected results: it is clear that the health context has produced hypertrophy of injunctive inscriptions, associated in particular with places or with regard to the behaviour of users of the public space. As a result, our intervention will then be to report, from a more qualitative point of view, to the faecon, which has opened up the field of urban scriptable and has given rise to a wide range of variations. These variations will, in conclusion, make it possible to question two risky features which are often associated with street features: on the one hand, their link with an identifiable and situable identity, and, on the other hand, their link with nonciative identities built as “delinquents”, “marginal” or “contestates”. On the one hand, pandering, which is over a year of urban life, is part of the everyday fabric of our cities; on the other hand, they make it possible to see ordinary ‘citizen’ bodies, which are rarely taken up in the position of a non-citizen active in urban discourse. Rhetoric of the city

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