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"City Views" is
a "work in progress" and is realized in cooperation with
city dwellers from migrant background in European cities. Locations
that are associated with emancipation and also those which exclude
the public presence of migrants are sought out and dealt with in photo-text
series form. Theoretical Background In "City Views," the perspective of urbanites from various cultural backgrounds will be the center of focus. This follows from Derrida's concept of difference (as a fluid category of articulatory practices) in contrast to the difference discourse of multiculturalism. The multicultural discourse, while recognizing cultural diversity, nonetheless controls cultural difference and establishes ethno-cultural identities. How
do migrants' living conditions differ from those of the non-migrant
society? What are these differences? To what extent are migrants stigmatized
by the "multicultural" ideas of the respective non-migrant
societies? Cities tend to represent themselves through their tourist attractions and "cultural heritage." Ideas such as the "easy-going Viennese" or the "charming French" are meant to constitute a unique cultural identity with the goal of attracting tourists (welcomed foreigners). In pamphlets, tourist brochures, and election political parties' propaganda, consciously selected urban views represent hegemonial ideas of a typical city - and national culture. Culture is fetishized as a consumer object and thereby made to serve every instrumental purpose. The belief in a single, self-contained cultural realm legitimizes the exclusion of minority groups who do not fit into this picture. In the course of so-called globalization, culture can only be conditionally maintained as an integrated, monolithic block, as an identity- building reference system able to be geographically located. Culture is open for interpretation and thereby also for "translation." Its meaning is negotiated and fought for so that in the end, all forms of culture are constantly in a process of hybridization. The "original" is constantly open for translation; as a result, the assumption of a totalized previously existing content - an essence - is untenable. Under the conditions of a global capitalism of goods, however, rather than an awareness of our own hybrid-ness it is possible to observe a massive recourse to discriminatory and ethnicizing identity constructions. "Western society," in which refugees from poorer states are denied entry per law and migrants are deliberately excluded, produces a culture of insensibility that is reflected in the regained strength of radical right-wing groups and also in subtle everyday racism. Implementation Photo and Text works, C-Prints (25 x 38 cm/framed 40 x 50) Prior
to the visits to conduct research and implement the project, city
dwellers from migrant background and migrant groups in each city were
contacted by telephone and in writing and invited to participate and
to suggest appropriate urban locations for the project. At the forefront
are issues such as the power, representation, production, and appropriation
of space. During
the visits to the cities, the city residents participating in the
project lead tours through their city and suggest the respective locations
as motifs. During this process, the way that the photographs are taken
(distance, choice of lenses, angle, etc.) is determined together.
After the photos have been taken, the participants complement their
selected motifs with statements, which will then be visible as a part
of the photo-text series. |