Thinking Barcelona
Thinking Barcelona: Ideologies of a Global City
EDGAR ILLAS
Series: Contemporary Hispanic and Lusophone Cultures
Volume: 7
Copyright Date: 2012
Edition: 1
Published by: Liverpool University Press
Pages: 244
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt5vjg5f
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Book Info
Thinking Barcelona
Book Description:

Thinking Barcelona studies the ideological work that redefined Barcelona during the 1980s and adapted the city to a new economy of tourism, culture, and services. The 1992 Olympic Games offered to the municipal government a double opportunity to establish an internal consensus and launch Barcelona as a happy combination of European cosmopolitanism and Mediterranean rootedness. The staging of this municipal “euphoric postpolitics,” which entailed an extensive process of urban renewal, connects with the similarly exultant contexts of a reviving Catalan nation, post-transitional Spain, and post-Cold War globalization. The transformation of Barcelona, in turn, contributed to define the ideologies of globalization, as the 1992 Games were among the first global mega-events that celebrated the neoliberal “end of history.” Three types of materials are examined: political speeches and scripts of the Olympic ceremonies, with special focus on Xavier Rubert de Ventós’s screenplay for the reception of the flame in Empúries; the urban renewal of Barcelona directed by architect Oriol Bohigas; and fictional narratives by Quim Monzó, Francisco Casavella, Eduardo Mendoza, and Sergi Pàmies. This juxtaposition of heterogeneous materials pursues some type of postdisciplinary decoding linked to a strictly Marxist premise: the premise that correlations between different superstructural elements shed light on the economic instance. In this study, Barcelona emerges as a singular conjuncture overdetermined by global capitalism, but is also a space to reflect on three main problematics of postmodern globalization: the spectralization of the social in a fully commodified world; the contradiction between cosmopolitanism and the state; and the vanishing essence of the city.

eISBN: 978-1-84631-787-3
Subjects: Language & Literature
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. Acknowledgements
    Acknowledgements (pp. ix-x)
  4. Introduction: The Euphoric Politics of Postmodern Barcelona
    Introduction: The Euphoric Politics of Postmodern Barcelona (pp. 1-23)

    Woody Allen’s 2008 filmVicky Cristina Barcelonadepicts Barcelona as a charming and cosmopolitan city. Foreigners find its fusion of European sophistication and Mediterranean lifestyle irresistible. The city is so appealing that it seems to have engendered the series of sexual encounters, romantic scenes, and artistic impulses experienced by the characters. It is true that, given the empty aestheticism and lack of social significance of his recent films, Allen could have set the movie in, say, Bagdad, and still manage to portray a group of affluent individuals only worried about their sexual dissatisfaction and their cultural taste. However, Barcelona seemed...

  5. CHAPTER ONE Olympic Specters at the End of History
    CHAPTER ONE Olympic Specters at the End of History (pp. 24-80)

    In the opening ceremony of the 1992 Olympic Games, Barcelona’s mayor Pasqual Maragall began his welcoming speech by retrieving an uncanny specter of the past. He referred to the city’s attempt in 1936 to organize an alternative Games to the Nazi Olympics held in Berlin that same year. He also alluded to the president of Catalonia’s autonomous government of the Generalitat de Catalunya, Lluís Companys, who would have inaugurated these Games if they had taken place. Maragall’s exact words were “Senyors, ciutadants del món: fa cinquanta-sis anys s’havia de fer una Olimpíada Popular en aquest estadi de Montjuïc. El nom...

  6. CHAPTER TWO The City Where Europe Meets the Mediterranean
    CHAPTER TWO The City Where Europe Meets the Mediterranean (pp. 81-132)

    This chapter analyzes three specific ideological aspects of the politics of postmodern Barcelona. While the previous chapter contextualized the 1992 Olympic Games in the global moment of the end of history, here I focus on the calculated use of the notions of the Mediterranean, Europe, and the city to deploy a specific hegemonic definition of Barcelona. I will describe this ideological redefinition as Barcelona’s “urban cosmopolitanism.” Therefore, while Chapter One inscribed our object of study in a temporal frame, this chapter focuses on the spatial imaginary of Barcelona’s euphoric politics during the Olympic years. My aim is to undertake a...

  7. CHAPTER THREE The Barcelona Model of Urban Transformation
    CHAPTER THREE The Barcelona Model of Urban Transformation (pp. 133-179)

    A crucial element of Olympic Barcelona was the major urban renewal implemented by the city hall. This transformation not only illustrated or complemented these municipal politics, but essentially embodied them. The spatial transformation of the city became the most visible component of Barcelona’s euphoric politics during the 1980s.

    The urban renewal has also been the most studied and lauded aspect of contemporary Barcelona. The general admiration that it has received in the last 20 years has generated considerable bibliography in urban and architectural studies. Even though most studies combine a variety of approaches, this bibliography can be roughly divided into...

  8. CHAPTER FOUR Learning from Barcelona
    CHAPTER FOUR Learning from Barcelona (pp. 180-219)

    Perhaps in contradiction with the previous analysis of the urban renewal of Barcelona and its correlation with postmodern phenomena such as the shopping mall, Disneyworld, or Las Vegas’ theme hotels, this chapter explores whether Barcelona can represent an exemplary model for contemporary cities, and even for the city of the future. My main question is: Does this urban model contain any transformative contents worth retrieving? If so, can this model be applied to other cities? To what extent was this transformation an irreproducible case determined by specific historical circumstances; and to what extent is it transposable and exemplary? In short,...

  9. Conclusion
    Conclusion (pp. 220-222)

    One question traverses this study: Can we find in the conjuncture of Olympic Barcelona any directives for some type of urban and historical change? Are the immaterial production of new ideologies and the material reconstruction of the city exhausted in their own realization, or do they offer us guidance for future transformative politics?

    The ideologies of postmodern Barcelona have provided a singular occasion to articulate a critical encounter between Marxism and deconstruction that has, perhaps, resulted in three main propositions. First, the question of spectrality. In Barcelona, the simulacrum of the Olympic spectacle turned every political figure and every social...

  10. Works Cited
    Works Cited (pp. 223-237)
  11. Index
    Index (pp. 238-244)
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