مجلة العلوم الانسانية لجامعة أم البواقي
Volume 5, Numéro 1, Pages 1258-1270
2018-06-29
Authors : Haddad Mordjana .
In Don DeLillo’s Underworld (1997), the representation of urban space plays an important role in explaining certain realities about New York City. First, this space is saturated with the lights of the advertisements that vehicle what is known as the consumer culture. Second, beneath the shining space lies the Bronx, a marginalized underworld. Seemingly, this neighborhood is abandoned by the city. Nevertheless, Ismael Muñoz and his friends try to draw the city’s attention to the condition of their neighborhood through their graffiti art. Interestingly, this art travels across space on the surface of trains. So this article’s objective is threefold: first, it discusses how the public space becomes a site for the expression of the consumer culture. Second, it shows the marginalization and the urban decay of spaces like the Bronx, as a direct outcome of the capitalist system. Finally, it discusses the role of Graffiti in communicating the lamentable condition of the neighborhood outside its boundaries.
The Bronx ; Consumer culture ; Graffiti art ; Underworld ; urban space
Soufli Hassiba
.
pages 2919-2932.
Hadji Faiza Fatma Zohra
.
Haddouche Fethi
.
pages 306-320.
Bouacida Soumaya
.
pages 5-16.
Salah Salah Naima
.
Benabed Fella
.
pages 455-467.
Abdelhak Nemouchi
.
Hamani Nesrine
.
pages 1141-1152.