Articles
Summary
In this article, we highlight the importance of art and culture as elements of transformation in the contemporary city. Adopting a critical urban perspective, we developed ethnographic fieldwork between 2018 and 2019, taking as a starting point the ambivalences of art and culture in the transformation of territories. We look at three territories in Lisbon where the relationship between the city and the arts stands out: the Intendente, as a reference case of public policies that transformed a decadent space into a fashionable one; Marvila, as an old industrial space that has undergone important changes; and the hill of Santana, as a space designed for the future, where built heritage, structures and cultural and artistic events leverage the transformation process. Evidence suggests that Lisbon has replicated the prevailing neoliberal urban model. Furthermore, the social dynamics of resistance, although tenuous and often impotent to change hegemonic dynamics, is an important force in the territories. The three cases presented allow us to understand the direction of socio-territorial change, highlighting the importance of the presence of classified built heritage, structures and artistic and cultural events in valuing spaces, promoting their commodification and contributing to urban competitiveness.
Keywords
Lisbon, arts, culture, gentrification, neoliberalism
Lara, Barbarita
Ortiz, Yuliana
Takuapu, Amanda/Comunidade Tabaçu Reko Ypy
Chalá, Katherine
Delgado, Génesis
Minda, Darwin
Chávez, Andrea
Zambrano, Iván
Leite, Fabiana
Moura, Cleberson
Sallum, Marianne
Balanzátegui, Daniela
16.11.2024
Ricardo Vieira
15.11.2024
Rosa Maria Perez, Inês Lourenço
15.10.2024
Patrícia Alves de Matos
24.09.2024
Diego Amoedo
22.08.2024
Katherine Chalá [1], Daniela Balanzátegui [2], Valentina Romero [3], Catarina Nimbopyruá Delfina dos Santos [4], María Celeste Sánchez Sugía [5], Watatakalu Yawalapiti [6], Maria John [7], Marianne Sallum [8]
17.07.2024
Noelia García Rodríguez
11.07.2024
03.07.2024
José Sobral, Patrícia Alves de Matos
02.07.2024
Fabienne Wateau
25.06.2024
Juan Antonio Flores Martos
20.06.2024
Yacunã Tuxá [1], Natasha Gambrell [2], Luã Apyká [3], Blaire Morseau [4], Stephen W. Silliman [5], Daniela Balanzátegui [6], Marianne Sallum [7]
21.05.2024
Pere Morell i Torra
18.04.2024
Paulo Gabriel Hilu da Rocha Pinto
27.03.2024
M. Belén Ortega-Senet
13.03.2024
Abdellah Hammoudi
Tradução de Ilham Houass e Diane Abd-El-Karim
Revisto por Francisco Freire e Abdallah Hammoudi
12.03.2024
Simone Frangella
Max Ruben Ramos
05.03.2024
Raquel Gil Carvalheira
04.03.2024
Caroline Brettell
Marta Rosales
Sónia Ferreira
27.02.2024
Vincenzo Scamardella
06.02.2024
Paulo Victor Leite Lopes
06.02.2024
Thaddeus Gregory Blanchette
23.01.2024
Catarina Frois
06.12.2023
Pedro Figueiredo Neto and Ricardo Falcão
22.11.2023
Jarrett Zigon
16.11.2023
Ramón Sarró
10.10.2023
Ramón Sarró
10.10.2023
João Leal
Luís Cunha
Humberto Martins
03.10.2023
Mariana Tello Weiss
28.09.2023
Tamta Khalvashi
28.09.2023
Hermione Spriggs
21.09.2023
Raquel Mendes Pereira
19.09.2023
Patrick Laviolette
29.08.2023
Miguel Vale de Almeida
25.08.2023
Victor Hugo de Souza Barreto
28.06.2023
Francisco Martínez
21.06.2023
Ruy Llera Blanes
Luís Silva
Francisco Freire
Antonio Maria Pusceddu
Antónia Lima
Paulo Mendes
21.06.2023