2018
DOI: 10.14506/ca33.3.07
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Where the Sidewalk Ends: Automobility and Shame in Tbilisi, Georgia

Abstract: In July 2015, I met the urban planner Vladimir (Lado) Vardosanidze in front of the Tbilisi Concert Hall, a round, glass-plated building located at the convergence of a bewildering traffic pattern where two multilane one-way streets combine in a swirl of traffic to form a bidirectional road that becomes the main drag in Tbilisi's downtown. Lado, a spry seventy-year-old professor with specializations in urban planning, architecture, and culture, greeted me with a smile and told me that he had selected this locat… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
(20 reference statements)
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“…Heywood () explored how queer activists in Bologna, Italy, internally defined collective belonging at once in opposition to fixed categories of identity and a politics based on them, but also in ways that exceeded the constraints of this difference‐making. Sherouse () showed how people in Tbilisi, Georgia, morally enforce priorities in access to urban infrastructure, using a politics of shame to police irresponsible drivers who misuse sidewalks intended for pedestrians.…”
Section: Captivity Borders and Violencementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Heywood () explored how queer activists in Bologna, Italy, internally defined collective belonging at once in opposition to fixed categories of identity and a politics based on them, but also in ways that exceeded the constraints of this difference‐making. Sherouse () showed how people in Tbilisi, Georgia, morally enforce priorities in access to urban infrastructure, using a politics of shame to police irresponsible drivers who misuse sidewalks intended for pedestrians.…”
Section: Captivity Borders and Violencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a necessary dialectic, much work considered seepage or failures of containment through analytics of freedom (Furani ), the unruly (Cooper ; J. Fisher ; Scherz , 108; Stoetzer , 302), zaniness (Degani ), play (Rea ), transgression (Muir and Gupta ), porousness (Bjork‐James ), madness (Nuhrat ), rupture or breaking open (Kunreuther ; Kyriakides ; Ofstehage ; Saleh ), queering (Heywood ; Shirinian ), invasion (Sherouse ), excess (Gershon ), or contagion (Kivland ; Luna ; Rubin ; Rubinstein et al. ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the Metro’s physical expansion extended the system’s reach and improved its efficiency, planners recognized that it would not address the declining prestige of the Metro among the new middle classes. In Bucharest, as in other post-socialist settings (Sherouse, 2018: 455; see also Lemon, 2000), rising salaries and an expanding car culture led city residents to associate the Metro with low social standing. Interviews with Bucharest’s young office workers indicated, for example, that as convenient as the Metro may be, office workers would rather sit in traffic in the comfort of their own cars then pass through “dirty” Metro stations and ride in “overcrowded” trains.…”
Section: Mobilizing the Middle Classesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lack of sidewalks constrains suburban pedestrian mobility there and in Atlanta (Gaither et al 2015). In Tbilisi, Georgia, car owners appropriating sidewalk for parking are shamed by young activists (Sherouse 2018). Suburbanization of poverty and gentrification of urban centers affects racialized mobilities in Philadelphia (Sheller 2015).…”
Section: A Sampler Of Critical Issues Analyzed In Current Road Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%