| 000 | 01436nam a22001457a 4500 | ||
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| 999 |
_c520577 _d520577 |
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| 008 | 220920b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
| 100 |
_aBurte, Himanshu _934512 |
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| 245 | _aModernity as whitespace | ||
| 260 | _aSeminar | ||
| 300 | _a750, Feb, 2022: p.57-61 | ||
| 520 | _aAT first glance, the term ‘modern’ appears to designate a particular moment in time. That moment, however, is experienced most vividly as space in everyday life. A specific palette of conditions and experiences have long embodied the endless pursuit of modern space in India: abstract geometry, cement, compound walls, among other things. We know this broader space through fragments of experience: straight roads and orthogonal intersections in planned urban neighbourhoods, sometimes with drains and street lighting; the lived network of the railway as well as railway colonies in the middle of different nowheres; glass walls bravely, if unwisely, facing the sun in new city business districts; asphalt giving way to concrete on the expressways; elevated water tanks, and so on. Of course, informal settlements, unserviced but ‘pakka’ peri-urban developments, creakily historic urban districts, and bazaars in the open, all trouble the pretensions of these fragments of clean-slate modernity, as do villages without roads, toilets or primary health centres.- Reproduced | ||
| 773 | _aSeminar | ||
| 906 | _aURBAN DEVELOPMENT | ||
| 942 | _cAR | ||