Borders within Borders: Superkilen as the Site of Assimilation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33182/ijor.v3i2.2290Keywords:
Superkilen, cultural assimilation, politics of space, Islam and immigration, Aga Khan Award for ArchitectureAbstract
Cultural assimilation of “Muslim†immigrants in Europe poses a foundational question to political philosophy: is assimilation a prerequisite for socio-economic integration? What is often interpreted as the symptom of failed integration is the proliferation of ethnic enclaves in European metropolises. Non-white immigrants who experience discrimination and marginalization withdraw into isolated zones, creating internal borders within cities. These spaces are susceptible to a host of social problems and often become a fertile ground for radicalization. The State turns to design techniques to break open these ghettoized zones. This paper analyzes an urban renewal project that was conceived to address marginality in one such neighborhood in Copenhagen. Despite the façade of inclusivity and democratic participation, the design creates a parody of Muslim cultures by remixing culturally-significant symbols. In representing immigrants’ cultures as “Other,†the ideology of design mirrors the exclusionary preferences of the politics of the border.
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