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Spatializing Culture
An Engaged Anthropological Approach to
Space and Place (2014)

Setha Low

INTRODUCTION physical enclosure that limits who can enter or


exit, such as fenced and gated spaces;
Through long-term research and collaborative surveillance strategies such as policing, private
projects I have found that spatializing culture security and city ambassadors, and webcam
i.e., studying culture and political economy and video cameras that discourage people of
through the lens of space and placeprovides a color from entering the space because of racial
powerful tool for uncovering material and profiling; privatization of property, especially
representational injustice and forms of social areas that surround public spaces and deny
exclusion. At the same time, it facilitates an public access; legal and governance instruments
important form of engagement, because such that restrict entrance and use such as those
spatial analyses offer people and their found in Business Improvement Districts and
communities a way to understand the everyday condominiums and cooperative housing; and
places where they live, work, shop, and socialize. other related issues. All these systems of
I define engaged anthropology as those activities exclusion reference the underlying structural
that grow out of a commitment to the racism, sexism and classism that permeate
participants and communities anthropologists contemporary neoliberal society.
work with and a values-based stance that In the same way that history sheds light on a
anthropological research respect the dignity cultural change that is incorrectly seen as
and rights of all people and have a beneficent timeless and therefore not an important object
effect on the promotion of social justice (Low of study, the study of space, too, can direct
and Merry 2010). It also provides them with a attention to social and spatial arrangements
basis for fighting proposed changes that often that are presumed to be given and fixed, and
destroy the centers of social life, erase cultural therefore considered natural and simply the
meanings, and restrict local participatory way things should be. Space and its arrangement
practices. and allocation are assumed to be transparent,
In this chapter I draw upon both my but as Henri Lefebvre (1991) asserts, they never
commitment to engaged anthropology and my are. Instead when critically examined, space
experience with the effectiveness of spatializing and spatial relations yield insights into
culture for addressing inequality to frame this unacknowledged biases, prejudices and in-
discussion. These domains are integrated equalities that frequently go unexamined.
through my contention that theories and After reviewing the concept of spatializing
methodologies of space and place can uncover culture as it has been developed within
systems of exclusion that are hidden or anthropology, I draw upon a fieldwork example
naturalized and thus rendered invisible to other to illustrate the value of the approachMoore
approaches. The systems of sociospatial Street Market, an enclosed Latino food market
exclusion I am particularly interested in in Brooklyn, New Yorkand claim this urban
encompass a range of processes including commercial space for a translocal and networked

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S PAT I A L I Z I N G C U LT U R E 35

set of social relations rather than a gentrified who creates space as a potentiality for social
redevelopment project. relations, giving it meaning, form, and
ultimately through the patterning of everyday
movements, produces place and landscape (Low
SPATIALIZING CULTURE 2009; Munn 1996; Rockerfeller 2010). The
social construction of space is accorded material
Henri Lefebvres foundational work on the expression as a person/spatiotemporal unit,
social production of space adds that space is while social production is understood as both
never empty: it always embodies a meaning the practices of the person/spatiotemporal unit
(1991: 154). His well-known argument that and global and collective forces. Further, the
space is never transparent, but must be queried addition of language and discourse theories
through an analysis of spatial representations, expand the conceptualization of spatializing
spatial practices and spaces of representation is culture by examining how talk and media are
the basis of many anthropological analyses. deployed to transform the meaning of practices
Nancy Munn (1996) and Stuart Rockerfeller and spaces (Duranti 1992). For example, gated
(2010) draw upon Lefebvre to link conceptual community residents discourse of fear plays a
space to the tangible by arguing that social critical role in sustaining the spatial preference
space is both a field of action and a basis for for and cultural acceptance of walled and
action. Margaret Rodman (2001) and Miles guarded developments. The concept of spatializ-
Richardson (1982), on the other hand, rely on ing culture employed in this discussion, thus,
phenomenology and theories of lived space to encompasses these multiple processessocial
focus attention on how different actors production, social construction, embodiment,
construct, contest and ground their personal and discursive practicesto develop an
experience. anthropological analysis of space and place.
In my own ethnographic work, I initially
proposed a dialogical process made up of the
social production of space and the social MOORE STREET MARKET,
construction of space to explain how culture is BROOKLYN, NEW YORK
spatialized (Low 1996, 2000). In this analysis,
the social production of space includes all those At lunchtime, Moore Street market is bustling,
factorssocial, economic, ideological, and housed in a squat, white cement building that
technologicalthat result, or seek to result, in looks more like a bunker than an enclosed food
the physical creation of the material setting. market with its barred windows and painted
Social construction, on the other hand, refers to metal doors. The deserted street in the shadow
spatial transformations through peoples social of the looming housing projects seems oddly
interactions, conversations, memories, feelings, quiet for a busy Monday morning. Upon
imaginings and useor absencesinto places, entering, however, carefully stacked displays of
scenes and actions that convey particular fresh fruit, yucca and coriander, passageways
meanings. Both processes are social in the sense lined with cases of water and soda, and high
that both the production and the construction ceilings with vestiges of the original 1940s
of space are mediated by social processes, architecture of wooden stalls, bright panels, and
especially being contested and fought over ceiling fans reveal another world. Puerto Rican
for economic and ideological reasons. Under- salsa music emanating from the video store
standing them can help us see how local competes with Dominican cumbia blaring from
conflicts over space can be used to uncover and a radio inside the glass-enclosed counter of a
illuminate larger issues. narrow restaurant stall where rice, beans,
Unfortunately this co-production model was empanadas, and arroz con pollo glistening with oil
limited by its two-dimensional structure. and rubbed red spice are arrayed (see Figure 1).
Adding embodied space to the social construction The smell of fried plantains fills the air
and social production of space solves much of conditioned space as Puerto Rican pensioners
this problem. The person as a mobile spatial gather at the round red metal tables with red
fielda spatiotemporal unit with feelings, and white striped umbrellas open to offer
thoughts, preferences, and intentions as well as intimate places to sit and talk. A young boy in a
out-of-awareness cultural beliefs and practices Yankees t-shirt orders lunch for his Columbian

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36 S E CT I O N 1

mother who is hesitant to pass the security market vendors remained. But the market and
guard perched at the entrance who she thinks the neighborhood physically deteriorated with
might ask for her immigration papers. She urban disinvestment during the 1970s and
remains outside in the already-blazing Brooklyn 1980s. Despite an architectural renovation in
sun searching for a spot to sell flavored ices on 1995, its tenuous commercial viability due to a
the crowded sidewalk near the subway entrance. decreasing number of vendors and shoppers was
Moore Street Market vendors are made up of exacerbated in March 2007 when the New York
Latinos from Puerto Rico, the Dominican City Economic Development Corporation
Republic, Ecuador, Mexico and Nicaragua. The (EDC) announced it would be closed to make
Puerto Ricans immigrated to New York in the way for affordable housing.
1940s, while Dominicans, Mexicans, and With the threat of closure, the Public Space
Nicaraguans immigrated mostly in the 1980s. Research Group (PSRG), a team of CUNY
Their national and cultural identities are faculty and graduate students, joined the
spatially inscribed with Puerto Rican vendors remaining vendors and the Project for Public
located at the markets social and economic Spaces to help formulate a community-based
heart, a central area near the caf that sells response to EDCs closure. The New York Times
Caribbean food and plays salsa music, while the reporters also supported the Moore Street
relatively new Nicaraguans and Mexican market vendors, stating that the 70-year old
vendors are located in stalls along the periphery. Moore Street market was always more than just
These first generation immigrants keep ties to a place to do business [but] part of the fabric
their homeland alive through music, food, of Williamsburg life, with periodic cultural
family relationships and visits home. Many events and tiny shops and stalls that hearken
travel back and forth from their native countries back to the days before glitzy shopping malls
bringing goods for sale and carrying gifts and and sterile big-box stores (Gonzalez 2007).
merchandise to families living in Latin America. New York City officials and private developers
One of the vendors, Doa Alba, shuts her who would benefit from building affordable
metal screened stall, locking away her Seven housing argued instead that the market was not
Saints oil, plastic flowers, and white first supporting itself and was tired and rundown.
communion dresses. She tells me about her The media coverage and heated community
most recent trip to Latin America and success at meetings drew political attention from US
obtaining the special orders and medicinal Representative Nydia Velazquez and State
potions for her regular customers. As a young Assemblyman Vito Lopez who ultimately
girl from Mexico she worked her way up from secured $3.2 million in federal funding to keep
cleaning for white middle-class families who at Moore Street Market open.
that time still lived in the neighborhood and The ethnographic descriptions and vendor
selling fruit at a street stand to leasing her own life histories collected are being used to reinstate
retail space. The recent threat of eviction by the the market as a Latino social center and to offer
New York City Economic Development an alternative to the gentrification project that
Corporation (EDC), however, has slowed what saved Essex Street Market, a boutique food
little business there has been during the market in Manhattans Lower East Side. While
economic recession, and she worries about her the revitalization of the market is still in process,
future and the enterprise that she is so proud of one of the members of the PSRG, Babette
and has so painstakingly built. Audant, continues to attend community
Moore Street Market, built in 1941 and meetings and collaborate with stakeholders.
located in East Williamsburg/Bushwick, This advocacy effort, though, requires a more
Brooklyn, is one of nine enclosed markets embodied spatial analysis focused not only on
constructed to relocate the pushcart vendors the social production of this historic market,
and open air markets and supply modernizing but also on the everyday practices and agency of
New York City with safe and affordable food. the vendors, shoppers and neighbors who value
During the 1940s and 1950s, it was a thriving it. By embodied spatial analysis I mean the
Irish, Jewish and Italian immigrant market. theoretical premise that individuals as mobile
Although the neighborhood had a significant spatiotemporal fields realize space, and the
Puerto Rican population by 1960, as late as the importance of bodily movement and mobility in
early 1970s some of the original residents and the creation of locality and translocality. While

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S PAT I A L I Z I N G C U LT U R E 37

Moore Street Market began as a collaborative the Latino community to a place that is
advocacy project, it also generated scholarly forlorn, decaying and deteriorating. But these
insights into a translocal and community-based contradictory discourses come into dialogue
public space through the mobilities, emotions within one another through the space of the
and meanings of the people who work, shop and market and the people who use it. In this sense,
hang out there. the market is a form of spatialized culture that
Analytically the ethnography of Moore encompasses multiple publics and conflicting
Street Market reveals how urban public space meanings, contestations, and negotiations. In
links the body in space, the global/local power this case, the engaged practice of community
relations embedded in space, the role of collaboration and activism to preserve the
language and discursive transformations of market from gentrification also generated a
space, and the material and metaphorical better understanding of translocality and its role
importance of architecture and urban design. It in creating and maintaining a culturally diverse
is through this embodied space that the global is urban public space.
integrated into the spaces of everyday urban life
and becomes a site of translocal, transnational,
as well as personal experience. Moore Street CONCLUSION
Market can be understood as a place where
people spend the day listening to music from Moore Street Market illustrates how engagement
their homeland, eating lunch and working at and spatialization enhanced the breadth and
stalls where they make their livelihoods. scope of the research and advocacy project. The
Simultaneously they are enmeshed in networks market ethnography project was engaged from
of relationships, transnational circuits and ways its inception, incorporating a collaborative
of being that extend from the built environment place ethnography to assist the local community
of the market to the towns from which they and vendors in retaining the market for local
migrated, and where, in many cases, the use. The spatial analysis helped residents to see
products that they sell as well as other family the social centrality of the market in the
members remain, supported from the profits of neighborhood. It also produced a better way to
their commercial endeavors. think about translocality as embodied by users
It is the movement of these vendors, and residents circuits of exchange and social
shoppers, pensioners, and visitorsdifferen- networks. Thus, spatial analysis led to engaged
tiated by gender, age, class, ethnicity, and practice, and advocacy and application
national identityand their everyday activities: generated spatial and theoretical insights. I
conversations, purchases, listening to music, believe that one of the strengths of anthropology
eating homemade food, that makes the market lies in this close relationship, its theoretical
space what it is. And it is through the embodied grounding in practice.
spaces of their social relationships that the My second point is derived from this view of
market is simultaneously a local and translocal engagement and suggests that anthropologists
place. have an advantage with regard to theorizing
That is not to say that the market as socially space because we begin our conceptualizations
produced by the political machinations of New in the field. Regardless of whether it is an
York City institutions and officials does not ethnographic multi-sited study, a survey of
continue to play a role in its physical condition human bone locations, or an archeological dig,
and architectural form, and pose a challenge to there is an encounter with the inherent
the markets continued existence. Nor that the materiality and human subjectivity of fieldwork
meanings of the market are not socially that situates the anthropologist at their
constructed differently by the African American interface. Theories of space that emerge from
residents who live nearby, the tourists who visit, the sediment of anthropological research draw
the officials who want to close it, the newspeople on the strengths of studying people in situ,
who want a story, and the regulars who see it as producing rich and nuanced sociospatial
their place. Even the language and metaphors of understandings. Further, when spatial analyses
state officials and the media, as well as the talk are employed, they offer the engaged
of visitors and neighbors contribute to a series of anthropologist a powerful tool for uncovering
characterizations of the space as the center of social injustice because so much of contemporary

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38 S E CT I O N 1

inequality is imposed through the spatial Low, Setha. 1996. Spatializing Culture: The
relations of the environment and the discourse Social Construction and Social Production
that mystifies its material effects. Therefore, of Public Space in Costa Rica. American
anthropological approaches to the study of Ethnologist, 23(4): 861879.
space, such as the social production and Low, Setha. 2000. On the Plaza: The Politics
construction of space embodied translocal of Public Space and Culture. Austin:
spatiality, and discursive elements of Moore University of Texas Press.
Street Market suggest ways to improve the lives Low, Setha. 2009. Toward an Anthropological
of those who live, work, or hang out there. In Theory of Space and Place. Special Issue
this sense, spatializing culture can be a first or on Signification and Space. Semiotica,
last step toward engagement, and one that 175(14): 2137.
anthropologists can uniquely employ. Low, Setha, and Sally Merry. 2010. Engaged
Anthropology: Diversity and Dilemmas.
Current Anthropology, 51(2): 203226.
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