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Geography Colloquium Series: Piper Gaubatz, "Dancing at Dusk: Public Space in Chinese Cities"

September 26, 2014
7:30PM - 9:00PM
1080 Derby Hall

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Add to Calendar 2014-09-26 19:30:00 2014-09-26 21:00:00 Geography Colloquium Series: Piper Gaubatz, "Dancing at Dusk: Public Space in Chinese Cities" Event Host: Department of Geography Piper Gaubatz, professor, Department of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts, presents "Dancing at Dusk: Pulbic Space in Chinese Cities" as part of the Geography Colloquium Series.Chinese cities are being transformed as a wide range of processes of urbanization, from migration to sprawl, have fundamentally re-arranged patterns of land use, social areas, and the built landscapes of cities throughout China. At the same time, there have been substantive changes in the lives of China’s urban dwellers and the nature of the “public” in China which are manifested in the ways people use, produce and re-produce public space. Transformations of public space are particularly relevant in China’s dense urban core areas, which are undergoing massive redevelopment as urban economies and societies mature. Much of this redevelopment is guided by three overarching discourses which might be characterized as developmental, environmental, and social. This talk analyzes new and evolving types of public space in Chinese cities as the loci for ongoing contestation and connection between these three discourses and the production of formal and informal public space in differing Chinese regional contexts.For more information, visit the Department of Geography website.The 2014-2015 Geography Colloquium Series is funded in part through the John Nelson endowment and the alumni, faculty, and friends of Ohio State Geography endowment. 1080 Derby Hall College of Arts and Sciences asccomm@osu.edu America/New_York public
Event Host: Department of Geography


Piper Gaubatz, professor, Department of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts, presents "Dancing at Dusk: Pulbic Space in Chinese Cities" as part of the Geography Colloquium Series.

Chinese cities are being transformed as a wide range of processes of urbanization, from migration to sprawl, have fundamentally re-arranged patterns of land use, social areas, and the built landscapes of cities throughout China. At the same time, there have been substantive changes in the lives of China’s urban dwellers and the nature of the “public” in China which are manifested in the ways people use, produce and re-produce public space. Transformations of public space are particularly relevant in China’s dense urban core areas, which are undergoing massive redevelopment as urban economies and societies mature. Much of this redevelopment is guided by three overarching discourses which might be characterized as developmental, environmental, and social. This talk analyzes new and evolving types of public space in Chinese cities as the loci for ongoing contestation and connection between these three discourses and the production of formal and informal public space in differing Chinese regional contexts.

For more information, visit the Department of Geography website.

The 2014-2015 Geography Colloquium Series is funded in part through the John Nelson endowment and the alumni, faculty, and friends of Ohio State Geography endowment.

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