Scholarly Colloquia and Events

  • 1/31 Geography Colloquium - Architecture and Tellurian

    Daniella Gandolfo
    Associate Professor of
    Anthropology at
    Wesleyan University


    Architecture and Tellurian
    Power in Downtown Lima

     

    In downtown Lima, two structures are in intimate
    proximity and worlds apart. One is the modernist
    tower of the Judiciary, erected in 1954. The other
    is the infamous, below-ground market of
    “El Hueco,”or “The Hole,” which sells contraband,
    brand-forged, and pirate goods under the
    auspices of its patron saint, the Lord of Miracles
    (also known as the lord of earthquakes),
    and in the Judiciary’s shadow. Existing against
    all odds, what explains El Hueco’s staying power?
    Archival and ethnographic research
    direct us to tellurian forces and their potential
    influence against state-driven architecture and
    urban planning as a means of social control.

     


    January 31, 2020| 12:15 pm | AUST 434 |

    For more information, contact: Debanuj DasGupta at (860) 486-5952