This piece explores the role of history in the splintering urbanism thesis, and infrastructure studies more generally, to make the case for a more nuanced understanding of the multiple histories underpinning the networked city. I reflect on the use of history as an argumentative ploy in Splintering Urbanism, criticize common framings of the past in infrastructure studies, and map out an agenda for future scholarship on urban infrastructure histories based on this critique. In doing so, I argue that the messiness of infrastructure history gets obscured when told through evolutionary or retrospective narratives.
CITATION STYLE
Moss, T. (2022). Refracting Urbanism: The Multiple Histories (as well as Geographies) of the Networked City. Journal of Urban Technology, 29(1), 127–133. https://doi.org/10.1080/10630732.2021.2007201
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