Nezar AlSayyad a Professor of Architecture, Design, Urban Planning & Urban History at the University of California, Berkeley presents the keynote lecture for the Rethinking Global Cities Conference.
The Rethinking Global Cities Conference was held on February 5-7, 2015 and was funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation's "Partnership in a Global Age".
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In “rethinking” global cities, we begin with another conceptualization: What factors determine the cultural economy of global cities as they constitute major nodes in transnational networks? How do events like biennials, world fairs (expos), and sporting events help to brand a city as “global”? What describes the human experiences of a global city? What role do imperial legacies play in shaping the present dynamics of a global city? Are global cities by definition cosmopolitan sites? How do literature, music and art help us to understand culturally specific experiences of diverse people living in the same global city? The primary objective of the Rethinking Global Cities project is to investigate the complex, hybrid and contested cultural and human geographies of world cities in the context of national and global politics. By identifying networks of cities across world regions, participants in this multi-disciplinary project will put disparate global cities into dialogue with each other in a way that also questions area studies and nation-state models.