
Possessing The City Is A Social History Of The Property Market In Late-colonial Delhi; A Period Of Much Turbulence And Transformation. It Argues That Historians Of South Asian Cities Must Connect Transformations In Urban Space With The Economy Of The City. Using New Archival Material, Anish Vanaik Outlines The Place Of Private Property Development In Delhi's Economy From 1911 To 1947. Rather Than Large-scale State Initiatives, Like The Delhi Improvement Trust, It Was Profit-oriented, Decentralised, And Market-based Initiatives Of Urban Construction That Created The Delhi Cityscape. This Volume Also Serves To Chart The Emerging Relationship Between The State And Urban Space In This Period. Rather Than A Narrow Focus On Urban Planning Ideas, It Argues That The Relationship Be Thought Of In A Triangular Fashion: The Intermediation Of The Property Market Was Crucial To Emerging Statecraft And Urban Form In This Period. Possessing The City Examines Struggles And Conflicts Over The Commodification Of Land, Particularly Disputes Over Rents And Prices Of Urban Property. The Question Of Commodification Can Also, However, Be Discerned In Struggles That Were Not Ostensibly About Economic Issues: Clashes Over Religious Sites In The City. Through Careful Attention To The Historical Interrelationships Between State, Space, And The Economy In Delhi, This Volume Offers A Novel Intervention In The History Of Late-colonial Delhi.
This book investigates how the development of private property markets, rather than state-led planning, fundamentally shaped the urban landscape of late-colonial Delhi between 1911 and 1947. Anish Vanaik, a scholar of urban history, utilizes previously unexamined archival materials to challenge the conventional focus on state initiatives like the Delhi Improvement Trust. He proposes a triangular framework that connects the state, the economy, and urban space to explain the evolution of the city's built environment. By analyzing land commodification and property disputes, the author demonstrates how market-based construction defined the city's growth.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars of South Asian urbanism recognize this work as a significant contribution to the economic history of colonial cities. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the archival research and the clarity with which the author links micro-level property disputes to larger state-building processes.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192588443
ISBN-13:
9780192588449
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