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  <front>
    <journal-meta><journal-id journal-id-type="publisher">GH</journal-id><journal-title-group>
    <journal-title>Geographica Helvetica</journal-title>
    <abbrev-journal-title abbrev-type="publisher">GH</abbrev-journal-title><abbrev-journal-title abbrev-type="nlm-ta">Geogr. Helv.</abbrev-journal-title>
  </journal-title-group><issn pub-type="epub">2194-8798</issn><publisher>
    <publisher-name>Copernicus Publications</publisher-name>
    <publisher-loc>Göttingen, Germany</publisher-loc>
  </publisher></journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.5194/gh-74-31-2019</article-id><title-group><article-title>The lived city: everyday experiences, urban <?xmltex \hack{\break}?>scenarios, and topological networks</article-title><alt-title>The lived city</alt-title>
      </title-group><?xmltex \runningtitle{The lived city}?><?xmltex \runningauthor{A.~Lind\'{o}n}?>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author" corresp="yes" rid="aff1">
          <name><surname>Lindón</surname><given-names>Alicia</given-names></name>
          <email>alicia.lindon@gmail.com</email>
        <ext-link>https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2663-3140</ext-link></contrib>
        <aff id="aff1"><institution>Departamento de Sociología, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana,
<?xmltex \hack{\break}?>Campus Iztapalapa, Mexico City, Mexico</institution>
        </aff>
      </contrib-group>
      <author-notes><corresp id="corr1">Alicia Lindón (alicia.lindon@gmail.com)</corresp></author-notes><pub-date><day>7</day><month>February</month><year>2019</year></pub-date>
      
      <volume>74</volume>
      <issue>1</issue>
      <fpage>31</fpage><lpage>39</lpage>
      <history>
        <date date-type="received"><day>16</day><month>May</month><year>2018</year></date>
           <date date-type="rev-recd"><day>7</day><month>January</month><year>2019</year></date>
           <date date-type="accepted"><day>24</day><month>January</month><year>2019</year></date>
      </history>
      <permissions>
        
        
      <license license-type="open-access"><license-p>This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this licence, visit <ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xlink:href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</ext-link></license-p></license></permissions><self-uri xlink:href="https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/74/31/2019/gh-74-31-2019.html">This article is available from https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/74/31/2019/gh-74-31-2019.html</self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/74/31/2019/gh-74-31-2019.pdf">The full text article is available as a PDF file from https://gh.copernicus.org/articles/74/31/2019/gh-74-31-2019.pdf</self-uri>
      <abstract>
    <p id="d1e78">The general subject of this text is the contemporary city, understood as a
lived territory: it develops a theoretical–methodological approach to the
sociospatial construction of urban territory that integrates both the
material and the nonmaterial.</p>
    <p id="d1e81">The sociospatial construction of the lived city is approached via an
articulated set of analytical levels. Accordingly, the first part presents
the level of the spatial practices and the urban imaginaries that accompany
them. The second part integrates the incorporated affectivity that acts and
territorializes itself in the everyday life of the city. The third part
considers urban scenarios as situational articulations of the subjects of
the two previous parts. Individual topological networks are then
incorporated as sequences of urban scenarios that integrate the subjects'
biography, leading on to the crisscrossing of different topological networks
in an approximation of the lived city in all its fragmented, dense, and
fluid complexity.</p>
  </abstract>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
<body>
      

<sec id="Ch1.S1" sec-type="intro">
  <title>Introduction</title>
      <p id="d1e91">The general subject of this text is the contemporary city, understood as a
lived territory from day to day (Di Méo, 1991, 2006). More specifically,
it develops a theoretical–methodological approach – rooted in different
levels of analysis – to the sociospatial construction of urban
territory that integrates both materiality (fixed and lived) and
nonmateriality in an experiential viewpoint revolving around the constant
flux of everyday life.</p>
      <p id="d1e94">Urban studies have developed analytical schemes that focus on spatial forms,
and these have proved extremely effective for understanding various aspects
of the materiality of cities, but the notion that a city is more than just
materiality poses a significant challenge in this field. In this context,
this text is based on a dual premise: on the one hand, nonmaterial elements
are indissociably intertwined with the spatial forms with which they
coexist, even though they are often overlooked in urban analysis; on the
other hand, both the city and urban life are being ceaselessly configured by
the flow of everyday life – they are unstable phases of social living. Thus,
the main aim of this text is to provide a multidimensional but fully
grounded approach to the sociospatial construction of the lived city as a
lived territory (Lindón, 2015). This territory can unfurl on various
spatial scales, and here it is considered as a day-to-day or lived territory
that “is set in the places of our experience, impregnated with our routines
and attachments” (Di Méo, 2008:16). It is conceived multidimensionally,
in keeping with Di Méo's (1999) perspective, in material, social,
political, and symbolic terms. In material terms, territory is made up of
defined spatial forms and has discernable frontiers. In social terms,
territory expresses subjects' adherence to social groups and is therefore
linked to collective identity and can become an action system that exerts an
influence on social relationships. In political terms, it expresses forms of
spatial control characteristics of a social group, thereby ensuring the
latter's reproduction and durability. In this respect, territory is also
connected to spatial appropriation. Territory also has a symbolic dimension
because its elements are endowed with meanings and values that contribute to
collective identities. It should also be noted that “territory gathers
together and associates places that are identified by means of the practices
undertaken therein” (Di Méo and Buleón, 2005:87).</p>
      <?pagebreak page32?><p id="d1e97">This approach articulates three related phenomena that interconnect subjects
with urban space, as well as representing expressions of territoriality.
Firstly, there is dwelling, the holistic and existential experience of being
in a certain place. Secondly, there is the material configuration or
assemblage of the places that subjects create every day through their
dwelling. This implies the elimination of certain spatial forms, as well as
specific objects, and the integration of others, in accordance with the
subject's lifestyle and the practices that comprise it. And, thirdly, there
is the transformation of spatial forms into subjects' living spaces. In
other words, the sociospatial construction of the city as a lived territory
is made possible by territoriality, as are the multidimensional relationships of
the subject with his or her living spaces, where at least three levels come
into play: the existential level of being on the land; the subject's
relationship with the material environment; and the patterns of meaning that
are woven with respect to this environment, its exteriority, and the
alterity that it integrates (Raffestin, 1986).</p>
      <p id="d1e100">These three phenomena must be considered in the light of the biographies of
the city's inhabitants, which can in turn be understood as stocks of
experiences that accumulate spatial insights within people that allow them
to tackle new urban experiences. These biographies merge subjects' spatial
experiences, and this amalgam constructs the lived territory. At the same
time, these spatial experiences give form to every life, which is always
territorialized. This constitutes a sociospatial construction of urban
territory along biographical and experiential lines: the sociospatial
construction of urban territory is a collective multidimensional process to
which the various inhabitants bring fragments that correspond with their own
biographies (which can be considered as assemblages of infinite spatial
experiences). The inhabitants therefore identify with some fragments of the
territory constructed in everyday experiences of the urban setting but not
so much with others. In short, biographies interlink with others and become
territorialized. This interconnection forms part of the social dimension of
the territory in play in this process. Thus, the sociospatial construction
of the urban territory is a process that is always in progress because the
lives that comprise it are always in flux.</p>
      <p id="d1e104">The second characteristic of the sociospatial construction of urban
territory is the way that it becomes embedded in the discourse of its
inhabitants (Lindón, 2015): the discourse gives it form. The fragments
of biographies that are being narrated are related to specific lived
circumstances. These links, with their array of fragments from past
experience,
mean that the spoken city contains information that forms part of these
biographies and therefore refers to places associated with the speakers'
everyday lives. However, the articulation of urban experiences (into a
narrative) allows them to circulate beyond the person who lived through
them, and this circulation, in its turn, allows these discourses to impinge
on other people's everyday practices. An inhabitant's lived experience thus
becomes social. It circulates and forms part of the ever-flowing collective
process of sociospatial construction lived by subjects in countless
interactions of various kinds (cooperation, disagreement, etc.).</p>
      <p id="d1e107">This theoretical–methodological proposal approaches the process of
sociospatial construction of the lived city as an ensemble comprised of
different analytical levels. Accordingly, the first part of the text deals
with the level of spatial practices and their associated urban imaginaries.
The second part draws in the incorporated affectivity that acts and is
territorialized in the city's everyday life. The third part considers urban
scenarios as situational articulations derived from the situations developed
in the two previous sections. Following this, a consideration of the
individual topological networks as sequences of urban scenarios that
integrate subjects' biographies and the subsequent crisscrossing of
different topological networks, which provide an approximation of the
complexity of the lived city in all its dense, fluid fragmentation is presented. The
text closes with some reflections, but these are not intended to bring the
debate to a close. These sections analyze territory's constituent
dimensions: practices and imaginaries reveal the social and symbolic
dimensions that construct the urban territory. Affectivities integrate these
dimensions with the political dimension, with appropriation, and urban
territorialities. Urban scenarios explore the situational configuration of
places in the city by intertwining materialities, practices, imaginaries,
and affectivities. Topological networks make it possible to move from the
situational singularity of a particular place to the ensemble of places
belonging to each biography. This explains why places that are far removed
and distinct from each other can be connected by the biographies of the
people living in them. These connections bring with them an intermeshing of
meanings. Ultimately, the crisscrossing of topological networks involving
various subjects constructs a city as a lived territory integrated by
networks from different places.</p>
</sec>
<sec id="Ch1.S2">
  <title>Everyday spatial practices and urban imaginaries</title>
      <p id="d1e116">The sociospatial construction of the city as a lived territory revolves
around one basic nucleus: the spatial practices of its inhabitants – in
other words, their everyday actions – which unfold in specific places, and
their various forms of territorialization. Spatial practices form part of
the array of their small worlds, which can be linked to the domestic sphere, a workplace, an educational establishment, or to shopping, leisure,
or other everyday activities, depending on the subjects under consideration.
They constitute the solid nucleus of a territory's social dimension.</p>
      <p id="d1e119">Simonsen (2007) has emphatically stressed that nothing in the social world
exists prior to practices – no awareness, no ideas, no meanings, no
structures, no mechanisms, no discourses, no networks, no pacts. Werlen
(1992) has also highlighted the centrality of social action in relation to
space, and he even called his theory the “geography of practices”.<?pagebreak page33?> Lussault
and Stock (2010) have similarly dwelled on the centrality of practices and
their practice-based approach is known as the pragmatics of space.</p>
      <p id="d1e122">Any spatial perspective primarily focused on practices thereby acknowledges
that these always have some meaning. People develop particular practices
because they are seeking something through them. In other words, there are
motives behind their actions, and the sense of these actions is configured
during the development of the practice. This expresses the symbolic
dimension of territory.</p>
      <p id="d1e125">An examination of the sense of everyday practices from a spatial perspective
brings to light two issues that are relevant to our approach. On the one
hand, the meanings acquired by practices as they are being undertaken tend
to be transferred to the places in which these practices are rooted. This
enables places to also acquire density. Buttimer (1976) was already pointing
out that people were imbuing places with intentions, values, and memory
through their everyday practices. On the other hand, the motivation to
perform a particular practice, or the meaning bestowed on it, is often
derived from the place associated with this practice. So, practices always
spring from meshes of meaning that reactivate themselves and are sometimes
reconfigured: the places in which practical life unfolds bestow meaning on
local tasks, while practices reconstruct the meaning of places. Along these
lines, Adams et al. (2001) suggest that it is within these
dynamics that places acquire texture, and this gives rise to a territory's
processes of symbolization. Similarly, it has been conjectured that there
are places of memory – whether individual or collective – that result from a
place's capacity to remember events that occurred there. And a place's
memory endows it with a particular character, making it a vehicle for a
specific meaning.</p>
      <p id="d1e129">Our understanding of the city's processes of sociospatial construction is
not exclusively confined to an analysis of spatialized everyday practices
and their meanings. This level of spatial pragmatics needs to be considered
alongside that of urban imaginaries (Silva, 1992). Although the meanings of
spatialized practices belong to the field of spatial subjectivity, just as
imaginaries do, they should not be superimposed on each other: these
meanings give sense to various specific practices and show the motivation
behind them, while imaginaries are more wide-ranging recipients of sense
that embrace numerous practices and occurrences that lead to certain
outcomes. Urban imaginaries are psycho-perceptive processes, motivated by
desire, that generate ways of understanding the world, ways of being and
behaving, and collective actions. They are embodied or incorporated into
various public objects, such as texts, images, art, and architecture (Silva,
2006). Silva's urban imaginaries enrich this approach because they provide
symbolization processes for the lived city: on the one hand, this is because the
materialization processes of its inhabitants' images, which were originally
immaterial and internal, contribute to the collective manufacturing of the
city (as in the case of graffiti). On the other hand, this materialization
of images in the city means that something that was internal to a subject
becomes public and is interpreted by others, and it thus acquires further
meanings. Finally, the fragments of a city into which its inhabitants
integrate materialities that become subject to successive interpretations
are themselves also subject to appropriation by other people in their own
everyday lives.</p>
      <p id="d1e132">On the broad spectrum of social imaginaries, urban imaginaries in particular
are subjective, fantastical tapestries of the city and urban life. They may
concern the city as a whole or focus on specific aspects, agents, or places
within the city. This view highlights the mesh woven by the imagination from
various elements taken from the shared meaning and it therefore anticipates
possible means of transformation. These elements are practices, sometimes in
the form of rituals imbued with values, desires, intentions, events,
restrictions, and prohibitions, and sometimes in the form of objects, places, and
subjects. One significant feature is that these subjective, spatialized
tapestries adopted by the inhabitants of a place are not always derived from
objects, subjects, events, or practices that unfold in situ. Sometimes they draw on
phenomena and series of practices that did occur in this place but at
another point in history, but they can also spring from facts, objects,
subjects, and events that evolved in other places. To put it another
way, one characteristic of social imaginaries, and of urban imaginaries in
particular, is that they come from everyday experiences far removed in time
and space. This makes their “nonrepresentational” nature crucial. As
Castoriadis (1987) has suggested, imaginaries can evoke objects, subjects,
places, or situations that are absent for whatever reason – maybe because
they were never present, or because they were previously present and then
ceased to be so (Lindón, 2008). They are capable of moving through time
and space or of migrating from one city to another or from one country to
another. This is what sets them apart from the meaning of a practice, as
this sense is always configured during the unfolding of the practice in
question. The nonrepresentational nature of imaginaries posited by
Castoriadis furthers our understanding of the process of sociospatial
construction of the lived city because it throws light on the role played by
fantasy in this process.</p>
      <p id="d1e135">This near ubiquity that is characteristic of urban imaginaries may not
represent any local phenomenon but may paradoxically model the everyday
practices of local subjects, bestowing intelligibility on the city through
their capacity to configure instruments of perception and understanding of
the urban reality and distribute them among the city's inhabitants
(Lindón, 2008:40). Urban imaginaries therefore induce some practices or
inhibit others by putting patterns of perceiving and understanding the world
into social circulation: they are actants.</p>
      <p id="d1e138">Sometimes urban imaginaries are projective urban fantasies that look firmly
to the future, while on other occasions they stand as retrospective urban
fantasies. In the latter case, they are the result of complex articulations
between<?pagebreak page34?> the past and the future, which imbues it with fantasy. In both
cases, urban imaginaries can be radical or derived Castoriadis (1987).
Radical imaginaries are the product of individuals' creative imagination and
induce social change, whereas derived imaginaries result from the takeover
by society of individuals' imaginations and they therefore encourage social
reproduction. These two types of urban imaginaries are sometimes referred to
as imaginaries of resistance and domination (Lindón, 2008).</p>
      <p id="d1e141">These subjective tapestries, known as urban imaginaries, are woven into the
symbolic structures of societies and emerge to manifest their capacity to
configure action in everyday territory. Thus, the concept of the lived
city's sociospatial construction via spatialized and meaningful everyday
practices immersed in various urban imaginaries “dignifies everyday
territory” through particular forms of a certain historicity not
unconnected to far-reaching processes that may produce new social forms or
reproduce existing ones. Thus, everyday practices and their meanings join
forces with urban imaginaries to constitute the three-faceted bedrock of the
city's sociospatial construction in a lived territory.</p>
</sec>
<sec id="Ch1.S3">
  <title>Incorporated and territorializing affectivity</title>
      <p id="d1e150">The practices of everyday life – with all the meanings that accompany them
and the imaginaries into which they can be interwoven – are crucial to any
understanding of the city as lived territory. However, consideration of the
incorporated affectivity that accompanies practices opens up a better
approximation of the urban phenomenon itself. Something that affects is
therefore primarily something that influences the self and is materialized
in the body, but it can also refer to something that exerts an influence on
other people through a degree of affect present in our body.</p>
      <p id="d1e153">According to the Deleuzian perspective of Clough (2008), “affect” refers to
the body's capacity to affect and be affected, and this embraces
sensitivity, the emotional domain, and life itself. This does not mean,
however, that affectivity is synonymous with emotions, although it is
difficult to untangle them from each other. Some authors have attempted to
differentiate between them. Thrift (2008), for example, integrates a
material focus on affects, due to their corporeal nature, while establishing
emotions on the plane of the subjective experience of affect. In contrast,
Anderson (2009) considers that there is nothing to be gained, in analytical
terms, from differentiating between affects and emotions and instead opts
for an integrated, holistic approach. His concept of “affective
atmospheres” integrates the material and the subjective, affects and
emotions, “presence and absence, materiality and ideality, definite and
indefinite, singularity and generality” (Anderson, 2009:77). Emotions
– which are always manifested in the body – imply body movement, which is
derived from alterations in the blood flow in reaction to spatial
experiences. “Emotions are an adaptive biological strategy to evaluate our
environment; using them, the subject evaluates the world in which she lives
in an immediate, prerational way, in a way that is simply lived and not
thought, thereby encouraging a response that is also immediate, fast,
unpremeditated, automatic” (Pintos Peñaranda, 2010:149).</p>
      <p id="d1e156">Any deciphering of the urban context is more enriched by considering the
relationship between affectivities or emotions and corporeity than by
considering emotions in themselves. And in this respect it is worth
remembering the approach of Merleau-Ponty (1962), who observed that things
(the world external to the human being) are embodied within us by our
perception. They are not therefore a pure perceived object – external and
recognized – but are rooted in our body, articulated to the very structure
of our perception. Outside and inside, exterior and interior, exist within a
relationship of reciprocal implication. It is possible to draw from his
reflections the idea of the external embodied in the subject, inscribed in
the body. If this conception is valid in relation to the external world of
things, it can be even more applicable to affectivity, which is essentially
derived from the sphere of emotions and sensations.</p>
      <p id="d1e159">By applying a spatial emphasis and following the nonrepresentational
theories (NRTs) (Thrift, 2008; Anderson and Harrison, 2010) – initially called
“theories of practices” (Thrift, 1999) – affect can be conceived as a
nondiscursive scenic sensation that moves from one body to another (Thrift,
2008). The framing of affect in scenic terms alludes to specific places in
which something is at play between the actors. At the same time, the scenic
elements also refer to the situational and circumstantial nature of affect
and emotions. The NRTs emphasize the nondiscursive nature of affect by
stressing that the latter precedes the awareness that is necessarily
implicated in language. In the approach followed herein, the nondiscursive
tendency of affect is seen in a pre-discursive light, based on the
assumption that affectivity appears prior to its formalization in a
discourse, but once it becomes apparent it is then also put into words.</p>
      <p id="d1e163">Another key aspect of this conception of affectivity is the way it
circulates between bodies in a particular space–time: affectivity is social
because it goes beyond the individual and moves from one body to another in
the proximity afforded by places in the city. The circulation of affectivity
between bodies generates types of performativities or dramatizations of the
social element (Turner, 1974) in play in every situation, and these are
ephemeral materializations of that affectivity (Pile, 1996).</p>
      <p id="d1e166">In densely inhabited public urban space, one can often observe various
subjects, at a given time and in a given place, experiencing and bodily
communicating something similar in the face of a particular occurrence, even
though they do not know each other. These affectivities are prompted by
something external to the subjects – a local occurrence – that affects them
and thus becomes incorporated (or inscribed) in their bodies. This gives
rise to a particular body movement. Furthermore, this affectivity circulates
from one<?pagebreak page35?> subject to another, triggering a movement between those subjects
close to the event. Examples of this include performativities of
constriction in the face of an unforeseen phenomenon, those of distancing
(diastemic performativities), and those of protection and self-protection. In
performativities of constriction, bodies seem to become smaller than they
were prior to the event that is occurring. Diastemic performativities, or
those involving distancing, express an almost instantaneous impulse to move
away from a particular hub of an occurrence, even when physical separation
is curtailed by the place's material conditions. Performativities of
protection and self-protection, meanwhile, try to reduce the body's visibility
and/or exposure by taking advantage of objects or other bodies, or the
place's spatial forms, or corporeity itself. Another example of affectivity
that constructs space while also being constructed by a place is the
dramatization of different social distances in the various urban spaces in
which encounters occur between alterities far removed from each other
socially and culturally.</p>
      <p id="d1e169">Affectivities inherently make and unmake the city's places at all times
because they configure the latter according to the ways they feel in them
and their ways of behaving; in short, according to the mise en scène. Affectivities
therefore materialize themselves in performativities and practices. So,
embodied affectivity “happens” and is territorialized in accordance with
its dispositions or ways of acting.</p>
      <p id="d1e172">One characteristic feature of these affectivities is the simultaneity
between the production of the pre-discursive emotion sensation and its
movement, circulation between bodies, and territorialization. This
simultaneity is usually identified with enacted expression, meaning
something that cannot be separated into parts or phases or into what comes
before and what comes after, on account of this very simultaneity and
multidimensionality. However, in terms of the sequential order inevitably
dictated by written expression, affectivity is said to emerge, circulate
between bodies and become territorialized, but the very nature of the
phenomenon implies that everything which is forced by the limitations of
grammar into a sequence in fact occurs at the same time.</p>
      <p id="d1e175">It is thus more appropriate to insert
“affectivity, performativity, and territorialization” into the constructivist
approach now holding sway than affectivity alone, as these three dimensions
operate simultaneously. In this unending process, the “body-subjects”
(Seamon, 1980) inhabiting the city are affected by something external, in
which action – in the form of bodily dramatization – emerges in and with
the lived territory and with the other people who cohabit it at that moment.
Accordingly, the construction process of a lived territory with specific
features is energized, even when it is ephemeral. In this way, with the aid
of corporeity (the body and what it expresses in each situation) an
individual appropriates the space and the time impinging on him or her and
transforms it, giving it a certain value and configuring territoriality as a
specific, situated, and dynamic link.</p>
      <p id="d1e178">This circumstance does not make every
affectivity, dramatization, and territorialization unique, as whatever is in play
and its defining patterns, and even performativity itself, tend to reproduce
themselves (albeit not in identical terms) in various places and moments of
time. Nevertheless, every dramatization can possess a degree of singularity,
as a particular expression of the urban situation in question, but it cannot
claim to be unique. In other words, singularity is derived from the
situational nature of affectivities, corporeities, and territorializations.</p>
</sec>
<sec id="Ch1.S4">
  <title>Urban scenarios</title>
      <p id="d1e187">Everyday practices and their meanings, and the urban imaginaries that arise
within them, are inscribed, along with affectivities and performativities, in
the everyday to-and-fro and its rhythms, as well as in the various places
that constitute the city's topological surface. The complex mesh of urban
territory can therefore be partially understood in empirical terms as
spatial–temporal fragments, referred to herein as urban scenarios.</p>
      <p id="d1e190">The lived city's urban scenarios are units of space–time that can be
fleeting or more prolonged and they can reoccur with a degree of cyclical
frequency or be one-offs; sometimes they are found in places that are highly
visible, at other times their visibility is partial and restricted. They
feature subjects who inhabit the city (sometimes known to each other but
often not), perform individual or collective practices, and put into play
knowledge about what to do, how to interpret the other people who form part
of the situation, and how to behave, and this gives rise to proxemics and
diastemics (Lindón, 2013), whether physical or social–cultural, in which
everybody expects something to happen. In a strict sense, all urban
scenarios are unique. Nevertheless, it is notable that similar scenarios
repeat themselves constantly, despite changes in the actors and the settings
and fragments of time in which they occur. In any case, urban scenarios lead
to an understanding of the city and urban life as a continuous process of
doing and undoing – and urban scenarios are one of the emblematic
expressions of the dynamics of the urban movement in vitalist terms.
However, this view of urban scenarios has a component inspired by Goffman
that embraces discursive elements, and it also integrates instability and
contingency, which are more closely associated with the affectivities
mentioned above. Urban scenarios are essentially dynamic, relational, and
situational. Urban scenarios demonstrate that social frameworks emerge and
are negotiated situationally within urban life (Goffman, 2006), and it is
the tension between what is reproduced (reiterated) and what is transformed
that gives rise to the constant sociospatial construction of the lived city.</p>
      <p id="d1e193">Urban scenarios are dense fragments of the lived city and the latter's
vitalist movement flows through them. The city is made up of infinite
scenarios at every moment, and every<?pagebreak page36?> scenario is a particular form of the
everyday flux that materializes the lived city. The other side of this
richness is the inevitable fugacity inherent to these urban scenarios.
Fugacity does not diminish their contents, however, as they construct and
deconstruct themselves to the rhythm of the city. This very temporariness
means that only minutes after one scenario has been brought to life it goes
on to form part of other scenarios. All this gives expression to the dynamic nature of urban scenarios.</p>
      <p id="d1e196">Scenarios are also relational because they always involve a meeting of
alterities, giving rise to various degrees of social interaction. At the
same time, scenarios give rise to relationships between subjects and the
spatial forms intrinsic to the place (materiality). One such relationship
can be the appropriation of these spatial forms by actors, in material or
symbolic terms. Sometimes a scenario's relational nature can come to life in
subjects' relationship with a strong, enduring sense of a place derived from
a scenario's spatial grounding, as when, for example, urban scenarios are
constructed on specific memorial sites.</p>
      <p id="d1e200">In short, another distinguishing feature of urban scenarios is their
relational nature, but their situational characteristics are equally
intrinsic. Situation offers an enlightening approach to everyday urban life
because it refers to actors' fragment of space–time. According to the
theories of situated cognition, individuals who act are inextricably linked
to the social world (Lave, 1997): urban scenarios provide the setting for
the emergence and reconstruction of the social worlds of action. The
situated condition is not exclusively derived from the scenario as regards a
place's specific location but rather from what is put in play there, from
the framing of the scenario, and from the expectations and affectivities that
circulate and materialize themselves in specific performativities. Anderson
posits a concept similar to this situated nature of the scenario: “diffuse,
vague, affective atmospheres”. This concept embraces both the materiality
of corporeity and the subjectivity associated with that corporeity, i.e.,
affects and emotions (Anderson, 2009; Michels, 2015). Urban scenarios and
their situated condition are not affective atmospheres in Anderson's sense
but they can be considered as being present in every scenario as an
expression of its situated nature and the affectivities territorialized
therein, and they endow it with a particular tone.</p>
      <p id="d1e203">For all the above reasons, urban scenarios have considerable methodological
potential, thanks to their dynamic, relational, and situated nature. The
scenarios provide a more wide-ranging view of the lived city.</p>
</sec>
<sec id="Ch1.S5">
  <title>From territorialized biographies to the lived city: topological
networks</title>
      <p id="d1e213">The approach presented herein is further enriched by the integration of
another level in which the sequences of urban scenarios in which a subject
has participated over the course of his or her biography is taken into
account. Thus, urban scenarios cease to be demarcated as spatial–temporal
situations closed in on themselves and grow into situations in which all the
actors involved connect – by comparing and contrasting similarities and
differences –  with other situations lived in other moments of their
biographical trajectory. Accordingly, each actor's biography is constructed
via a chain of transmission of knowledge, behavior patterns, and senses that
combine scenarios lived on an individual basis in both the past and present.
The memories and recreations of other places lived by a subject can emerge
in a scenario in which he or she participates in the present and thus
contributes to its current sociospatial construction, thereby allowing
scenarios to acquire density and interconnect with other ones.</p>
      <p id="d1e216">From the perspective of the biography of every actor involved in these
situations, this means that he or she is participating in a scenario, from
one minute to the next, and every one of these scenarios is associated with
different exteriorities, alterities, codes, and behavior patterns. This
leads to the configuration of what could be called a particular subject's
topological network: this consists of the incommensurable totality of the
places where that subject goes and puts their self into play, situationally.
The places that comprise such a topological network bear the marks of the
people who have formed part of these places and the scenarios that unfolded
there, as well as their appropriations (whether predominantly material or
symbolic) by each subject, how they have been named, and the narratives that
they have given rise to from the biographies of the people who have put down
roots there.</p>
      <p id="d1e219">A subject's topological network outlines the contours of his or her world,
but this world has movable borders because topological networks are always
extensive and retractile (Di Méo, 1991): at some points in a subject's
biography, the topological networks stretch out to more places, sometimes
going beyond their spatial center or triggering a displacement of the
spatial biocenters. Meanwhile, at other points in the subject's biography,
the topological networks are restricted, with a resultant reduction in
places, activities, and also alterities. This property of both extension and
retraction is linked to each subject's everyday flow, which changes over the
course of his or her biographical trajectory.</p>
      <p id="d1e222">As Pred (1977, 1981) has pointed out, encounters between different
individuals occur in the context of projects (institutionalized to a greater
or lesser degree) that bring them together, connect them, or simply put them
in close physical proximity. People's topographical networks (their places
and the urban scenarios in which they participate) can thus acquire greater
depth if there is an integration of the institutionalized projects through
which the subject becomes part of each scenario. The integration of an
individual's projects therefore provides keys to understanding his or her
practices and behavior within a scenario.</p>
      <p id="d1e226">Each subject's topological networks (with the multidimensionality proper to them) are derived from the dynamics of the city's sociospatial construction
process. But the city as<?pagebreak page37?> lived territory is the result of the contours and
texture of the intersections of one inhabitant's topological networks with
those of others. This allows us to move toward seeing the lived city as a
myriad of interconnected topological networks that provide a setting for the
circulation of affectivities, meanings and memories of places, and urban
imaginaries, along with spatial knowledge and conventions for acting within
them, or disputes and conflicts about places and the actions performed in
them.</p>
      <p id="d1e229">The crisscrossing of the various inhabitants' topological networks traces –
in an unstable manner – the texture of the lived city: in some hotspots the
lived city is extremely bulky, due to the multiple scenarios and biographies
interconnecting therein, while other places present simpler textures,
because the spatial experiences, scenarios, and biographies territorialized
therein have been fewer or more fleeting or less dense. In a similar manner, some
places present an infinite number of connections because they are
poly-inhabited, while others have only a few connections.</p>
      <p id="d1e232">The crisscrossing of the topological networks of a city's inhabitants can be
reflected in the diagrams used in almost every global city over the last 2 decades to represent connectivity networks (particularly those of a digital
nature) in the context of the transition toward smart cities (“Cities
4.0”). There is indeed a link between the two approaches, although the
topographical networks proposed herein are centered on the experience of
inhabiting these places and not on technology, and so they are not the same.
Nevertheless, these multiple connectivities intrinsic to Cities 4.0 do have
repercussions on the spatial experience of a city as lived by people, and to
some extent they are reconfiguring its inhabitants' topological networks,
particularly as regards the definition of “near” and “far”. The interaction
between a city's networks of digital connectivity and people's topological
networks is a field of study that needs to be analyzed in depth. The
difference between the space of representations and lived space posited by
Lefebvre (1974) may possibly provide us with a means of analyzing the
relationship between the networks of digital connectivity (a certain syntony
with the space of representations) and citizens' topological networks
(closer to lived space).</p>
</sec>
<sec id="Ch1.S6" sec-type="conclusions">
  <title>Conclusions</title>
      <p id="d1e241">The sociospatial construction of the lived city enhances subjects'
relationships with their everyday territories. This implies that the focus
is not on the inhabitant or the territory but on the link between the two –
in other words, on the territoriality. Similarly, this perspective has not
been constructed from an aerial view from outside the territory but rather
through the prism of territoriality itself, seen as the subject's
multidimensional relationship with his or her lived territories.</p>
      <p id="d1e244">The successive levels integrated into this premise have not been conceived
as a cut-and-dried scheme, but rather as a group of analytical fields which,
although indispensable to any deciphering of the lived city, could also be
complemented by still more jigsaw pieces. These analytical levels go beyond
the notion of scale, as this concept is closely associated with materiality
and its measurable dimensions. However, the dimensions under consideration
here overwhelm any perspective of scale, although the experiential scale
would have the most affinity with the perspective presented herein.</p>
      <p id="d1e247">Thus, one objective of this text has been the search for angles from which
the urban situation can be observed free from the immovable, reifying
certainties that have become so common in studies of the city of <italic>homo dormiens</italic>, as
regards the predominance of given spatial forms and locations. Here, the
city is presented as the handiwork of its inhabitants, integrating the
social sphere into the meshes of meanings and imaginaries that move
subjects, and also into the projects (institutionalized or otherwise) in
which subjects unfurl their daily practices.</p>
      <p id="d1e253">Any attempt to understand the city and the urban situation from vitalist
viewpoints, focusing on everyday life and the subjects who inhabit cities,
implicitly acknowledges the impossibility of knowing a city over its entire
extension (a premise that has been widely accepted). Such knowledge could
only be acquired through a series of successive reductions, particularly the
reduction of urban space to the locations of people and objects, even when
it is recognized that these are the end result of historical processes.</p>
      <p id="d1e257">This approach involves sidelining the city in its full extension in order to
hone in on dense fragments of the urban situation that are unstable and
ever-changing, although they are not isolated, as they are interconnected
via the dwelling of territorialized subjects. These urban fragments do not
have to be adjacent or spatially continuous. Thus, the concept of the city
presented above forsakes both chorological and topographical approaches in
order to explore topological viewpoints. This therefore highlights the
concept of urban territory inhabited by mobile subjects, who appropriate and
dispute fragments of that space to make them their own, to mark them, create
narratives from them, inscribe their own biographies on them, and sometimes
then abandon them to inhabit other places. These mobile subjects are not
only the <italic>homo faber</italic> of the city but also body-subjects and sense-subjects faced with
alterities (some sought, others neither sought nor desired), who inscribe
biographical events, dreams, fantasies, fears, rejections, values, ideas,
and images into the places of their life: the sociospatial construction of
the city is undertaken within the everyday by the subject-inhabitant.</p>
      <p id="d1e263">Urban scenarios are constituted on a necessarily analytical level, since
all of the above occurs in fragments of space–time in which something is put
into play and everything that is corporally done, felt, and performatized
here is situated<?pagebreak page38?> both in that small lifeworld and also in the social world
of each subject involved therein.</p>
      <p id="d1e266">The subsequent incorporation of individual topological networks allows us to
make visible the depth of the present: the moment in time proper to an
ephemeral urban scenario constitutes a dense present because it integrates
the various pasts of each subject involved in the scenario. How does it do
this? By virtue of the spatial memory and knowledge that have bestowed on
the subject a stock of ways to interpret what is going on, and of possible
actions in the face of what is being played out. In other words, each new
space–time situation in the city does not occur – and is not consumed –
solely within the course of its ephemeral duration. Prior to that, each of
these situations has already integrated many moments from the past, as well
as the knowledge that these have bestowed on the subject. Topological
networks are the mechanisms by which some places in the city reproduce the
characteristics of – or instead differentiate themselves from – other
places. Topological networks unfurl via canals along which the sense of a
place can travel: so, the sense attributed to one place – as, for example,
a territory of safety and protection – is attributed to another one, despite
a physical distance between the two. This occurs because what is lived by a
subject at a certain point in his or her biography is remembered and
activated later on, maybe in a distant place. Thus, urban scenarios, which
could seem excessively situational, feed on the biographical depth of each
participant in the scenario.</p>
      <p id="d1e269">The crisscrossing of the topological networks of the various subjects that
coincide in a scenario provide glimpses of the origins of the complexity of
each moment in the sociospatial construction of the city. The perspective is
not closed at these levels, as it could be enriched by still more levels,
which enrich the multidimensionality of the territory's subsequent
organizing concept.</p>
      <p id="d1e272">In terms of urban geography, this approach represents a way to transcend the
material basis derived from spatial forms, as well as partial conceptions of
territory fed, above all, by the locational dimension. Therefore, for urban
geography such an approach throws down the challenge to see things inside
out: instead of accepting a city's spatial forms as products inherent to the
society that shapes it, the starting point here is the subjects, who
configure themselves into who they are in relation to their lived territory
and their constant activity within it. Even when spatial practices are
banal, subjects personalize them, fill them with social meanings, abandon
them, dispute them, mark them, expand and contract them, relive the past in
them, and also launch them into the future. Seeing things inside out also
implies shifting temporality in terms of historic processes to everyday
temporalities in which historicity and memory emerge, to be either
reaffirmed or transformed. In other words, this social construction of the
city's lived territory undertaken every day by its inhabitants can throw
light on hidden corners of the city that remain undetected by analyses of
the social production of urban space. Any urban geography that integrates
these analytical dimensions (which are explored in other social sciences,
although not always with a spatial emphasis) is fully capable of
participating in the major debates of current social theory and enriching
them from territorial perspectives.</p>
</sec>

      
      </body>
    <back><notes notes-type="dataavailability">

      <p id="d1e279">This article is based on the research project “Habitar
la ciudad: La corporeidad y las emociones en clave espacial y
biográfica”, which was conducted in the Research Area of the Department
of the Sociology of Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Campus
Iztapalapa, Mexico City.</p>
  </notes><notes notes-type="competinginterests">

      <p id="d1e285">The author declares that she has no conflict of interest.</p>
  </notes><ack><title>Acknowledgements</title><p id="d1e291">The author would like to thank the editors of the special issue “Contested Urban Territories: Decolonized Perspectives”, Anke Schwarz and Monika Streule, for their constructive comments and thoughts.<?xmltex \hack{\newline}?><?xmltex \hack{\newline}?>
Edited by: Myriam Houssay-Holzschuch <?xmltex \hack{\newline}?>
Reviewed by: two anonymous referees</p></ack><ref-list>
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    <!--<article-title-html>The lived city: everyday experiences, urban scenarios, and topological networks</article-title-html>
<abstract-html><p>The general subject of this text is the contemporary city, understood as a
lived territory: it develops a theoretical–methodological approach to the
sociospatial construction of urban territory that integrates both the
material and the nonmaterial.</p><p>The sociospatial construction of the lived city is approached via an
articulated set of analytical levels. Accordingly, the first part presents
the level of the spatial practices and the urban imaginaries that accompany
them. The second part integrates the incorporated affectivity that acts and
territorializes itself in the everyday life of the city. The third part
considers urban scenarios as situational articulations of the subjects of
the two previous parts. Individual topological networks are then
incorporated as sequences of urban scenarios that integrate the subjects'
biography, leading on to the crisscrossing of different topological networks
in an approximation of the lived city in all its fragmented, dense, and
fluid complexity.</p></abstract-html>
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