Playing with Infrastructure like a Carishina: Feminist Cycling in an Era of Democratic Politics


Abstract:

This article discusses transit infrastructure as a site of radical possibility and limitation in an age of participatory democracy across Latin America. I focus on multiple spaces of participation in Quito, Ecuador to elucidate how citizenship and infrastructure are co-produced through gendered processes. I first analyse city space of Quito from a gendered and infrastructural lens to consider how urban environments are dictated by violence and insecurity. Then, against this backdrop, I explore the spatial strategies of the feminist bicycle collective, Carishina en Bici, which translates from Quechua to “bad housewives that cycle”. Here, I draw on the concept of “deep play” to reveal how public practices in Quito question the equitable impacts of local democratic experimentation. To examine Carishinas’ spatial practices, I focus on an urban alleycat race, the Carishina Race, to show how strategic practices of solidarity reinsert feminist possibilities in urban space.

Año de publicación:

2019

Keywords:

  • gender
  • citizenship
  • democratic politics
  • public space
  • bicycling activism
  • infrastructure

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso restringido

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Estudios de género
  • Género

Áreas temáticas:

  • Grupos de personas
  • Cultura e instituciones
  • Otras ramas de la ingeniería

Contribuidores: