Infrastructures of Freedom: Public Light and Everynight Life on a Southern City’s Margins

Infra­struc­tures of Free­dom sheds light on the impact of ina­de­qua­te public light­ing in self-built com­mu­ni­ties in Cape Town. In demo­cra­tic South Afri­ca, whe­re infra­struc­tu­re pro­vi­si­on still reflects deep­ly embedded noti­ons of citi­zen­ship, infor­mal neigh­bour­hoods with mini­mal infra­struc­tu­re pro­vi­si­on face chal­lenges bey­ond access to basic ser­vices and oppor­tu­ni­ties. Fear, the fee­ling of being for­got­ten, and living in undi­gni­fied con­di­ti­ons are among the powerful expe­ri­en­ces dark­ness brings about in the­se neigh­bour­hoods. The book not only reve­als the­se expe­ri­en­ces of ever­y­night life, but takes a step fur­ther: it con­siders how the co-pro­duc­tion of a solar public light­ing pro­ject within a com­mu­ni­ty impro­ved ever­y­night life and sug­gests ways for infra­struc­tu­re to more suc­cessful­ly arti­cu­la­te citizenship.

Aut­hor: Ste­pha­nie Briers

With a fore­word by Chris­ti­an Schmid and Sophie Oldfield

 
Berlin: jovis Verlag, 2023
Softcover
17 × 24 cm
272 pages
English
ISBN 978–3‑86859–776‑9

Open Access