Lonely? Mean? Hostile? Cities get a bad rap. But why? Romit Chowdhury has lived in cities worldwide; from Kolkata to Rotterdam. He tells Alexis and Rosie about the wonder of urban “enchantment” found in a stranger’s smile, our changing ideas of the “urban”, and why anonymity is not always in fact the enemy of civility and friendship in the city.
Plus: how did “walking the city” emerge as a revolutionary research method? And why is Romit so fascinated with public transport – from exploring auto-rickshaw drivers’ masculinity in Kolkata, to studying sexual violence on the busy trains of Tokyo.
Romit, Alexis and Rosie also share their tips for thinking differently about urban life – from Japanese film to novels that explode norms about bodies in the city.
Guest: Romit Chowdhury
Hosts: Rosie Hancock, Alexis Hieu Truong
Executive Producer: Alice Bloch
Sound Engineer: David Crackles
Music: Joe Gardner
Artwork: Erin Aniker
Find more about Uncommon Sense at The Sociological Review.
Episode Resources
Romit, Rosie, Alexis and our producer Alice recommended
- Claudia Piñeiro’s novel “Elena Knows”
- N. K. Jemisin’s book “The City We Became”
- Shinya Tsukamoto’s filmography
- Teju Cole’s novel “Every Day is For the Thief”
From The Sociological Review
By Romit Chowdhury
Further readings
- “Dangerous Liaisons – Women and Men: Risk and Reputation in Mumbai” – Shilpa Phadke
- “For Space” – Doreen Massey
- “The Metropolis and Mental Life” – Georg Simmel
- “The Arcades Project” – Walter Benjamin
- “Delhi Crime” (TV series) – Richie Mehta
- “The Country and the City” – Raymond Williams
- “Why Women of Colour in Geography?” – Audrey Kobayashi
- “‘Delhi is a hopeful place for me!’: young middle-class women reclaiming the Indian city” – Syeda Jenifa Zahan
- “The Way They Blow the Horn: Caribbean Dollar Cabs and Subaltern Mobilities” – Asha Best
- “Black in Place: The Spatial Aesthetics of Race in a Post-Chocolate City” – Brandi Thompson Summers
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