Identifier
etd-03132006-171644
Degree
Master of Arts (MA)
Department
Geography and Anthropology
Document Type
Thesis
Abstract
In the post-industrial American city, the question of what urban space means seems far less important then how it is lived through the dynamic struggles of city dwellers to claim these spaces as their own. These struggles to define urban space are not always overtly political and thus must be examined through the more everyday, sometimes unconscious practices of city dwellers. This thesis attempts to valorize the emotional work of cities through an ethnographic study of Coney Island, Brooklyn. Coney Island is examined first as an urban space which allows tourists to move beyond traditional practices of visual consumption, then as a unique public space of playful bodies and finally, as a space of remembering where absence in the built landscape allows visitors to insert their own imaginings. Through a proliferation of everyday practices and imaginings in less regulated city spaces like Coney Island, established meanings of the city are challenged and reconstructed. City dwellers subvert the aesthetic rationality of the planned city through their sensory experience. Thus, the textual city becomes illegible.
Date
2006
Document Availability at the Time of Submission
Release the entire work immediately for access worldwide.
Recommended Citation
Matassa, Elizabeth Healy, "Whaddya want? it's Coney Island!: tourism, play and memory in the illegible city" (2006). LSU Master's Theses. 3875.
https://repository.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/3875
Committee Chair
Miles Richardson
DOI
10.31390/gradschool_theses.3875