Los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. El casodel pueblo de San Miguel Carrillo, Querétaro

The growth of cities at the expense of surrounding towns has been an indisputable process. The interesting thing about this process is that although these are spaces that change (for urbanization), they are also territories that remain in memory, territories that are built in the imagi...

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Main Author: Lorena Erika Osorio Franco
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Industrial de Santander 2017-12-01
Series:Cambios y Permanencias
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.uis.edu.co/index.php/revistacyp/article/view/7785/7963
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spelling doaj-a850cd384de64b3c91750e9b7377da8f2020-11-25T00:17:41ZspaUniversidad Industrial de SantanderCambios y Permanencias 2027-55282027-55282017-12-0182278305Los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. El casodel pueblo de San Miguel Carrillo, QuerétaroLorena Erika Osorio Franco0Universidad Autónoma de QuerétaroThe growth of cities at the expense of surrounding towns has been an indisputable process. The interesting thing about this process is that although these are spaces that change (for urbanization), they are also territories that remain in memory, territories that are built in the imaginary and are preserved because it means "something" for its inhabitants. This is the case of the town of San Miguel Carrillo (north of the city of Querétaro), a place where the sense of belonging is built from social organization (based on popular religiosity) and a common past they share. In the collective memory of the carrillenses there are two facts that marked the historical evolution of the town: 1) the expropriation of the ejido and 2) the impact of the industrial park (not only for the change of land use and productive sector, but also because the water became scarce). These two events are narrated and are assumed to date as a great loss, as a historical debt that the city has with them.http://revistas.uis.edu.co/index.php/revistacyp/article/view/7785/7963Urbanizationspacememorypopularreligiosity
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lorena Erika Osorio Franco
spellingShingle Lorena Erika Osorio Franco
Los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. El casodel pueblo de San Miguel Carrillo, Querétaro
Cambios y Permanencias
Urbanization
space
memory
popularreligiosity
author_facet Lorena Erika Osorio Franco
author_sort Lorena Erika Osorio Franco
title Los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. El casodel pueblo de San Miguel Carrillo, Querétaro
title_short Los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. El casodel pueblo de San Miguel Carrillo, Querétaro
title_full Los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. El casodel pueblo de San Miguel Carrillo, Querétaro
title_fullStr Los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. El casodel pueblo de San Miguel Carrillo, Querétaro
title_full_unstemmed Los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. El casodel pueblo de San Miguel Carrillo, Querétaro
title_sort los pueblos urbanos, territorios en disputa ante el proceso deurbanización. el casodel pueblo de san miguel carrillo, querétaro
publisher Universidad Industrial de Santander
series Cambios y Permanencias
issn 2027-5528
2027-5528
publishDate 2017-12-01
description The growth of cities at the expense of surrounding towns has been an indisputable process. The interesting thing about this process is that although these are spaces that change (for urbanization), they are also territories that remain in memory, territories that are built in the imaginary and are preserved because it means "something" for its inhabitants. This is the case of the town of San Miguel Carrillo (north of the city of Querétaro), a place where the sense of belonging is built from social organization (based on popular religiosity) and a common past they share. In the collective memory of the carrillenses there are two facts that marked the historical evolution of the town: 1) the expropriation of the ejido and 2) the impact of the industrial park (not only for the change of land use and productive sector, but also because the water became scarce). These two events are narrated and are assumed to date as a great loss, as a historical debt that the city has with them.
topic Urbanization
space
memory
popularreligiosity
url http://revistas.uis.edu.co/index.php/revistacyp/article/view/7785/7963
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