Keeping space public: Times Square (New York) and the Senegalese peddlers

This paper explores the public nature of Times Square's physical and represented (TV, internet, press) spaces through an analysis of the techniques used by Senegalese male peddlers to sell souvenirs to the visiting tourists. Whereas a number of scholars denounce the Disneyfication of Times Squa...

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Main Author: Stéphane Tonnelat
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Unité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-cités 2007-03-01
Series:Cybergeo
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/4792
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spelling doaj-0c16509e995243e2837421e9696d49ca2020-11-25T02:35:54ZdeuUnité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-citésCybergeo1278-33662007-03-0110.4000/cybergeo.4792Keeping space public: Times Square (New York) and the Senegalese peddlersStéphane TonnelatThis paper explores the public nature of Times Square's physical and represented (TV, internet, press) spaces through an analysis of the techniques used by Senegalese male peddlers to sell souvenirs to the visiting tourists. Whereas a number of scholars denounce the Disneyfication of Times Square, in other words its privatization, the observation of the peddlers shows that there is an almost self-regulated social order of the flow escaping the control of the pseudo-public institution in charge of Times Square, the Business Improvement District. On the other hand, the difficulties encountered by the vendors also reveal another Times Square, less public, constituted by the accumulation of images captured by the finance and media companies settled in the office towers. This "clean and safe" pseudo-private space (Mitchell and Staeheli 2006) cannot tolerate the presence of the vendors, thus pushing them to the blind spots of the site. It nevertheless relies on the dynamics of the flow, thus preserving a place for the vendors and the public nature of the physical space of Times Square. But how long can this compromise work?http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/4792ambulantismmetropolization/metropolisationpublic spaceTimes Squarestreet vendingpeddler
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stéphane Tonnelat
spellingShingle Stéphane Tonnelat
Keeping space public: Times Square (New York) and the Senegalese peddlers
Cybergeo
ambulantism
metropolization/metropolisation
public space
Times Square
street vending
peddler
author_facet Stéphane Tonnelat
author_sort Stéphane Tonnelat
title Keeping space public: Times Square (New York) and the Senegalese peddlers
title_short Keeping space public: Times Square (New York) and the Senegalese peddlers
title_full Keeping space public: Times Square (New York) and the Senegalese peddlers
title_fullStr Keeping space public: Times Square (New York) and the Senegalese peddlers
title_full_unstemmed Keeping space public: Times Square (New York) and the Senegalese peddlers
title_sort keeping space public: times square (new york) and the senegalese peddlers
publisher Unité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-cités
series Cybergeo
issn 1278-3366
publishDate 2007-03-01
description This paper explores the public nature of Times Square's physical and represented (TV, internet, press) spaces through an analysis of the techniques used by Senegalese male peddlers to sell souvenirs to the visiting tourists. Whereas a number of scholars denounce the Disneyfication of Times Square, in other words its privatization, the observation of the peddlers shows that there is an almost self-regulated social order of the flow escaping the control of the pseudo-public institution in charge of Times Square, the Business Improvement District. On the other hand, the difficulties encountered by the vendors also reveal another Times Square, less public, constituted by the accumulation of images captured by the finance and media companies settled in the office towers. This "clean and safe" pseudo-private space (Mitchell and Staeheli 2006) cannot tolerate the presence of the vendors, thus pushing them to the blind spots of the site. It nevertheless relies on the dynamics of the flow, thus preserving a place for the vendors and the public nature of the physical space of Times Square. But how long can this compromise work?
topic ambulantism
metropolization/metropolisation
public space
Times Square
street vending
peddler
url http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/4792
work_keys_str_mv AT stephanetonnelat keepingspacepublictimessquarenewyorkandthesenegalesepeddlers
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