
New Books Network Shiben Banerji, "Lineages of the Global City: Occult Modernism and the Spiritualization of Democracy" (U Texas Press, 2025)
Dec 18, 2025
Shibban Banerji, an architect and historian from UC Berkeley, dives into the fascinating interplay between occult modernism and the spiritualization of democracy. He explores how early 20th-century upheaval led to a new global consciousness that united diverse urban spaces. Banerji discusses the role of ashrams in South Asia as democratic alternatives, critiques of global planning from figures like Paul Otlet, and the feminist perspectives in Marion Mahony Griffin's works. His insights reveal how modernism shaped an ethical vision for our interconnected world.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Urban Form As Moral Technology
- Occult modernism links urban form to feelings that cultivate a sense of global interconnectedness.
- Architects used representation (film, drawing) to train citizens to feel responsible to others and the environment.
Beautiful Middle Harbor Film Example
- Marion Marnie and Walter Burley Griffin made a 1928 film, Beautiful Middle Harbor, to sell a Sydney suburb and model ethical living.
- The film staged residents protecting bushland and foregrounded responsibility to land and creatures.
Global Ethos From Imperial Crisis
- The globe emerged as an ethical category amid crises that threatened imperial ties.
- Modernists rejected both liberal internationalism and international socialism in favor of ethics cultivated through planning.
