Postcolonial Urban Studies

Édouard Glissant and the Whole-World of Cities

Garth Myers author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:22nd Jan '26

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Postcolonial Urban Studies cover

Drawing on ideas from postcolonial theory and literary and cultural studies Garth Myers develops a new framework for re-imagining global urban studies. This framework is developed in dialogue with the work of Martinican poet and thinker Édouard Glissant, in particular his collection of essays entitled, Treatise on the Whole-World, which deploys analogy and juxtaposition to elucidate relationality between places. Utilizing this methodology, which is comparative in nature, each chapter is based around a pair of cities through which different themes are explored. The pairings are: Fort de France, Martinique with Zanzibar, Tanzania; the Zambian Copperbelt with Scranton, USA; Kingston, Jamaica with Hartford, USA; and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania with Los Angeles, USA. Each chapter combines historical, literary and cultural studies with analysis of a tangible, crucial issue in urban studies. In so doing, the book addresses some of the key concerns of canonical literature in Global North urban studies – from the Manchester School, Chicago School and Los Angeles School, along with the work of Jane Jacobs – and considers what an alternative Glissantian cultural approach might offer.

Garth Myers has written a book that demonstrates how, and why, to do postcolonial scholarship. It brings a fresh and accomplished contribution to the contemporary urban studies literature. -- Mark Davidson, Professor of Geography, Clark University
In Postcolonial Urban Studies, Garth Myers magnificently resuscitates the work of Edouard Glissant, a little-known and greatly under-appreciated scholar from Martinique. In bringing to life Glissant’s main organizing principle centered on the idea of the 'whole world', Myers makes a strong and carefully crafted argument for adopting 'ways of seeing' that reject the totalizing, universalizing impulse that shapes mainstream urban studies in particular and conventional social science more generally. By juxtaposing seemingly quite different cities, this book represents some of the finest thinking on the slippery idea of 'postcolonial studies'. -- Martin Murray, Professor of Urban and Regional Planning and Adjunct Professor of Afroamerican and African Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

ISBN: 9781788218405

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224 pages