Thursday 31 March 2016

Urbanistas Meet Urban Vendors







The Urbanistas blog describes the women moving around in downtown Port of Spain and focuses on the advantages and the difficulties of navigating the space in the female body. The urban vendors in Trinidad (UVTT) blog look at the vendors specifically in the same space and breaks down the nature and feel of the space they exist in and the struggle to move product, compete with other vendors, exercise ones rights to exist there and resist imposers on those rights and the threat that globalisation places on their livelihood. In our analysis of the space we see it through the eyes of the woman whilst the UVTT blog does more of a class based analysis of the socioeconomics involved in street vending, occasionally making comparisons to cities in St. Vincent. An important aspect, the comparison, as it foregrounds the discussion upon what an image for a “Caribbean City” would consist of. This is a very important discussion in the conceptualisation of the Caribbean region and starting the informed discussion on how we can develop with the best interest of the region in mind. It was also very important to talk about how globalisation affected the city vendors increasing the difficulties of survival as the local vendors, in addition to competing with each other they now face even greater adversaries in the form of imported products by major distributors that are more cost effective and convenient and while they may be able to continue to cater to the working class poor persons this audience just may not be enough to sustain their businesses and thus their livelihoods.

Tuesday 29 March 2016

Women meet in the city




The very few open public spaces left for sitting, like the Woodford Square has been the point where many women would meet either on their lunch hour or in between getting household chores done to talk with each other. This is an important function of the city, to facilitate social interactions. It also may be part of the reason why women outlive men as they make time and find safe spaces to discuss their lives and the issues that may come up, seek or give advice and listen to each other. Previously we mentioned mothers having problems navigating the city of Port of Spain with their children but the single woman is not free of challenges. There is a growing number of coffee shops and small food places but they all require person to patronise the establishments in order to then occupy the space, finding free spaces like the Woodford square with sitting space to comfortably have conversation is rare as there is only few other places like it, for instance Independence Square and the Queen’s Park Savannah. Usually leaving women conversing in the streets or on the way in and out of clothing stores. Window shopping is usually an activity that would facilitate such conversation but would not provide uninterrupted conversation and sitting space.  But women find places that may not have been intended for seated conversation.

Monday 28 March 2016

Poor working class rural women in the city




Capitalism in its expansionist phase, regarded the colonies as a source of raw materials which once processed could be unloaded on the European market. After a phase of capital accumulation, capitalism has now modified its notion of profitability. The colonies have become the market (Fanon 1965, pg. 26). This creation of mini capitalisms existing as part of a larger capitalism has wreaked havoc on our society. In terms of gender we have a hierarchy that places people on the lowest rung based on a number of aspects of themselves. Also interesting is the fact that cities are emblems of that settled life which began with permanent agriculture (Mumford, 1989) and now in contemporary times there is no place for agriculture and very little space made for retail of fresh produce.
 “The dependency of the urban upon the rural for survival. The rural provides raw material that the urban processes for export/domestic consumption. The urban is not self-sufficient. What separates differentiates the urban from the rural is structure and supporting infrastructure. The city is a place where the society is organised and compartmentalized for easy navigation.” (Mumford, 1989)

Rural women interact with the city as an outsider. Based on conversations hand most women are part of a husband wife team and their husbands are at home working the land or securing produce from other farmers for retail and they are the ones that come to the city to sell. Their ties to the city do not go beyond income generation space and consumerism. Thus after the money is made and spent they go home to develop their home, so in terms of the city being a closed loop cycle there is a lot lost to the home environment of the rural migrants. We then have to ask ourselves the skills and investment of the rural working class women into systems of communal labour in local and regional agricultural practices and exchanges are not valued in the neoliberal capitalist city anyway. This goes beyond economics of living in the city and living in rural areas but the cultures are quite different and based on the rural to urban vis-a-vis daily exodus it would seem that the rural workers would be uncomfortable dwelling in the city that they work in. Poor folks have poor ways so when the rural women come to the city and attempt entrepreneurship that are marginalised and not accepted by the city because city folk have urban ways of commerce branding and marketing products, (people) and service. These differences provide ample ammunition for the evil to then attack society by coercing urban dwellers to reproduce these divisions and discriminations in the way the rural originals are treated by law enforcement, municipal authorities and by their fellow urban entrepreneurs.
Like our education system or urban landscapes are producing monsters. This neoliberal capitalism industrial complex is dehumanising our population, while we continue to expect the dehumanised beings to act like humans. The space that we exist in need to be changed in order to rectify the social issues that have resulted, reform of the city means fixing civilization (Mumford, 1989). The living expression of the nation is the collective consciousness in motion of the entire people. It is the enlightened and coherent praxis of the men and women (Fanon, 1964).

References

Fanon, Frantz. 1963. The Wretched of the Earth. New York: Grove Press.

Mumford, L. 1938. The Culture of Cities. Harcourt, Brace and Company, New York.




Saturday 26 March 2016

Mothers in the city



“Before concerning itself with international prestige, must first restore dignity to all citizens, furnish their minds, fill their eyes with human things and develop a human landscape for the sake of its enlightened and sovereign inhabitants” (Fanon, 1964).
Being a mother in the city of Port of Spain is difficult as a visitor and as a resident. The poor inadequate public amenities provided, little activities and/or spaces dedicated to children, the narrow cramped pavements, the inconsiderate drivers all make Port of Spain a particularly hostile environment. Amenities that contribute to the liveability of cities are in short supply. The stock of open spaces have not kept up with population growth, especially in the older core cities. As a mother in a hostile environment makes it difficult to care for and protect a child or a number of children. God forbid one is with child and the baby get hungry and the mother has to breastfeed after finding a space where one is allowed to sit (most likely after buying an expensive coffee drink or sandwich due to the subservience of local public interests to interests of global capital (Banerjee, 1989) much to the detriment of or urban mums) a couple hours later or less mum would then have to do a more extensive search for a bathroom with a changing table to clean and change the child’s clothing. For older ones the problem would simply be keeping them occupied as beyond the National Library and food places I am unsure as to what one working class poor mother would do with a child or children in Port of Spain. There is Movietowne but there is not very working class poor friendly and while they don’t openly or blatantly discriminate against such persons their prices and unavailability of public transport to and from the venue sure does the trick of maintaining the perception they have as a middle to upper class recreational venue.

References

Fanon, Frantz. 1963. The Wretched of the Earth. New York: Grove Press.

Banerjee, T 1989 The future of Public Spaces: Beyond Invented Streets and Reinvented Spaces. American Planning Association. Journal of the American Planning Association; Winter 2001; 67, 1;pg 9

Wednesday 23 March 2016

Class fashion and women



All over the world, there are so many magazine articles and books telling women what to do, how to be and not to be, in order to attract or please men. There are far fewer guides for men about pleasing women” (Adichie, p. 10).
The clothes that are being designed for women shopping in the downtown urban spaces these days are extremely generic hip hop/ diva/ passa passa dance wear and the pricing and styles are geared towards a particular size shape and class. There is an internal debate going on within on how revealing women should get with their bodies. Too revealing on a regular basis could be empowering as there is celebration of the female form and banishing of the idea of a woman as an object for sexual conquest while being covered can also convey that message but from the perspective that a woman does not need to use her body to get what she wants. Black and brown bodies are hypersexualised and fetishized by persons with power attributed to gender, race and/or class and this understood sexualisation of the black and brown female form is further compounded by the styles of the clothing provided for those of lower income brackets. In terms of the urban as a reflection of society it would seem that the lower class women’s fashion is being directed by the proponents of gender based oppression to encourage a damning perception of the lower class women so as to continue the status quo.

References


Adichie, C. 2012. TEDxEuston (transcript) ‘We should all be Feminists’. Vialouge.

Sunday 20 March 2016

Women as the muse for commercialism and marketing

In the city there is a tremendous amount of advertising, which makes perfect sense as capitalist cities are geared towards income generation thus relies on consumerism which relies on sound advertising and marketing practices. It was interesting, the amount of advertisements that incorporated the use of the female image and references to females in its campaigns. The female image was used to sell lots of products and services; clothes, hair care products, food, cars and alcohol.
‘The devaluation of the woman and all things feminine has caused subsidence in all aspects of society. The girl is taught that she must be attractive, courteous, virtuous and entertaining so that a man could enjoy her company and want to keep her around’ (Adichie, 2012).The society we live in professes to be a tolerant, male/female, ‘normal sexual’, sexy yet/and respectable society but in fact we live in a society where all-inclusive just means free food and drinks at an event and nowhere puts these ideals on display on giant billboards and store signs like the city. Our society is one where male means anti-female and female means anti-everyone because girls do not do common struggle and all men are dogs. Socially accepted physical bodies are associated with products as marketing strategies with the ‘Carib girl,’ the girl with the ‘unbeweaveable’ weave, the super sexy business women becoming major personas being advertised in society along with the associated consumer goods and services that are usually able bodied, socially accepted beautiful/exotic people. We advertise, buy and sell sex (both in terms of referrals to gender and sexual connotations) and I mean that literally and figuratively and sometime we are not aware of our participation the subliminal messages we send, receive and act on and how they relates to our social problems (specifically gender based violence and discrimination). These projected personas then become objectified people and the objectified person in a black or brown body is then fetishized and oppressed. It is difficult to oppress or assert yourself over a human being but then when the human has been worn down and relegated to a breathing object it is as easy as making sexual advances to a possibly under aged girl in public at broad daylight with no condemnation or redress. 
References


Adichie, C. 2012. TEDxEuston (transcript) ‘We should all be Feminists’. Vialouge.

Wednesday 16 March 2016

Women as target consumers




There has always been women that have been the sole caretakers of the household with the assistance of a male breadwinner (while it is not the only situation for women it is quite common) and this dynamic relationship between women, households and consumerism is reflected perfectly in the urban setting.  The main streets of Port of Spain are probably Frederick, Henry and Charlotte and they stretch from Independence Square to differing points before the Queen’s Park Savannah and on those streets there are a myriad of businesses most of which are geared towards providing consumer goods and services for the caretaker of the home like; grocery stores, bakeries, fresh produce, household goods stores interspersed with female hair care, clothing, accessories and shoe stores now there were also bars and casinos and barber salons and men’s wear stores but when you looked on the street at 10 am on a weekday and you counted ten people five times, in every group of ten six were women. When you looked into the stores and you looked at the workers and the customers they were mainly women. In the five instances the survey was done the four men would have been seen unloading trucks or vending. 

Saturday 12 March 2016

Women as employees





A man is as likely as a woman to be intelligent, innovative, and creative. We have evolved. But our ideas of gender have not evolved very much (Adichie, 2012). Which is interesting in our society when taking into consideration our history, women came as workers and labourers not as wives with the onset of colonisation and slavery and fought side by side with men when it was ended and continued to build the nation afterwards (Hosein, 2009). This is evident in the cities as it is in the home as there are women employed in every field of both skilled and unskilled labour with varying proportions to men because some fields are more welcoming than others and women sometimes have to betray who they are as women to survive in the work environment.
Heels, walking through the city observing, there were tall ones and short ones and many in-betweens. Skirts or pants? Yes quite a few of varying lengths and fits. In high paying administrative jobs it would seem that women would dress to hide or remove emphasis from their female form to avoid the stereotypes associated with femininity like bossiness, emotional irrationality and lack of ability to critically think. In the lower paying administrative and retailer service jobs it appears as though women wear more form fitting clothing. This is either due to the fact that they are surrounded by their peers (other low paid working class women) and dress to be attractive either for males or to compete with other females (I believe it’s the latter simply because most suitors are rejected openly) or they attempt to use their femininity and the preconceived notions that come attached to their advantage in the work place (to bask in mediocrity, to be asked to do certain jobs over others, etc). Women’s work wear is a complicated as there is the need to either emphasize the female form or hide it, very few have the confidence in the work environment and just exist it seems it all appears intentional.
Or am I just a product of my society and think that women use their bodies to send messages and to gain socially and economically? Is that I am assuming that they are not just clothing themselves based on what they can afford or what they have but serving a purpose, feeding the gaze, the scrutiny that they face. Am I also generalizing women’s work wear to the office suits and uniforms of various franchises? Yes, because I have thus far ignored the women that work in the protective services, in the sanitation services, on the port and within the construction industry. Their jumpsuits, boots and protective gear are women’s work wear too simply because women wear them.  
References
Adichie, C. 2012. TEDxEuston (transcript) ‘We should all be Feminists’. Vialouge.

Hosein, G. 2010. TEDxUWI (video) “Revolution A Way of Life”. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUp2JClvEcM .

Tuesday 8 March 2016

Asami

Asami



Asami Nagakiya, Japanese national pan player, came to the city of Port of Spain as a participant and was found dead. The mayor Tim Kee when questioned on the issue made comments “You know before Carnival I did make a comment about vulgarity and lewdness in the conduct and you know, some question was asked by one of the smart media people when I spoke of the things that I see some women do, assisted by men of course. But the woman has the responsibility to ensure that they are not abused.” He then continues saying “When I heard that news this morning (yesterday), I know you would have tourists that would come here who are strangers here and may not be aware of all the risks of doing certain things. In the Savannah over there – it’s somewhere by the Savannah, right? So then you have to let your imagination roll a bit and figure out was there any evidence of resistance or did alcohol control” alluded to Asami being sexually assaulted in a possibly drunken state in her skimpy carnival costume when she was found.
The city as a manifestation of society, the happenings of the city as a manifestation of our collective thought (Amin, 1997). There were proponents as well as there were opponents of the statements made by the then Mayor. It would seem that our urban synecdoche is murder and misogyny as Port of Spain and environs is the setting for murders and the stage which misogynist expound their problematic ideas but overshadowed by the grandeur of such preposterous events are groups that advocate for an end to violence and gender based discrimination. The protests that ensued afterwards provided the necessary pressure to remove at least one misogynist and voice outcries to and from the wider society against gender based violence. At a vigil held in Woodford Square for victims of domestic violence a group of men and women came together to remember the lives of the lost women and discuss issues surrounding gender in our society. There were victims of abuse present and they said the lack of support by the state to mediate conflicts before and during abuse and/or protect these women from their abusers after they have removed themselves from the harmful environment. It is all coming together now because if our representatives make statements in public forms as boldly as the then mayor did with little condemnation from his peers then no wonder there is a lack of support for these women at state institutions.

“Cities will be both instrument and goal for further human development, once fixed.” (Mumford, 1938)

For centuries, the world divided human beings into two groups and then proceeded to exclude and oppress one group. It is only fair that the solution to the problem should acknowledge that. (Adichie, 2012). We blame the victim because if we actually look at the culprit it means looking in the mirror or having to take the time to critically assess the system that we have created ourselves. It would mean admitting wrongs we have committed for generations in family development, education and the judicial system. Ultimately it is our pride you see.

References
Adichie, C. 2012. TEDxEuston (transcript) ‘We should all be Feminists’. Vialouge.

Ghouralal, D. 2012. Carnival Death: Tim Kee says women must protect themselves from abuse. LoopTT. http://www.looptt.com/content/tim-kee-women-protect-yourself-abuse .

Mumford, L. 1938. The Culture of Cities. Harcourt, Brace and Company, New York.

Women in the World Staff. 2016. Mayor Ignites Outrage by blaming Woman’s Carnival Killing on Lewd Behaviour. NYTlive. http://nytlive.nytimes.com/womenintheworld/2016/02/12/mayor-ignites-outrage-by-blaming-womans-carnival-killing-on-lewd-behavior/ .

Friday 4 March 2016

  Is religion good for women? - Tony Blair Faith Foundation.






Ever since the beginning of time, women have been seeking greater participation, more leadership, greater roles and parallel to this, it has actually been becoming easier for them in these modern times.

Religion has always been an interest of women in which they have become extremely active. They have been able to play a significant role and have been at the center of most of the worlds religions. They have always have a huge part to play in developing a relationship with God to what they see as the most powerful, the most beautiful and most true and also because they deal with regularly issues of life such as marriage, birth and those such as illness and death.

Historical women have been playing huge roles faith leadership without having to defer to male leadership. In modern times, they have been getting more educated, joining the work force and into much greater public roles of leadership.

A really serious situation for religion is that some women are fighting for control while others are leaving the church or other religions due to this struggle since their energies can be placed somewhere else. This causes a decline in the church as seen in western countries and there is no solution presently.



Tuesday 1 March 2016

Women Vendors In Port Of Spain.





An important activity in unorganized sectors is street vending which is taken up by . Women street vendors are a result of poverty, broken families, insufficient husband's income and divorced or separation from their husbands. they sometimes lack skill and work in very poor economic conditions. in comparison to other trades, street vending is one of the easiest to enter  for poor migrants and lower income groups within the city. When compared with male street vendors, women face a lot more problems than men since they are generally affected by women targeted crimes such as rapes, sexual harassment and public teasing making street vending not an easy task for them. Women play multiple roles as a mother, housewife and worker. Poor working conditions, low and irregular income, poor working and living conditions and lack of capital and assets are all interconnecting factors that pulls women into the vicious circle of poverty.

Liberalization polices have adverse effects on poor women lives. Although it creates opportunities, they are faced with very poor conditions. Together with this is the increasing casualization and their lack of interest and access to skills and technology.

Street vendors are exposed to a variety of safety and health issues due to poor social protection and their working conditions. On average, women vendors earn less than men vendors. Women vendors suffer from urinary tract infections as well as kidney ailments due to the lack of toilets. None are put in placed because public vendors are regarded as a nuisance since they are accused of depriving pedestrians of their space which has been linked to anti-social activities as well as causing traffic. The media as well as municipal authorities and housing societies have all targeted vendors at frequent intervals. since the role of vendors are not recognized, a combination of problems have arises such as constant eviction threats, fines and harassment by traffic policemen.


Friday 5 February 2016

https://youtu.be/Ce1bJDwsfqQ

An insight to our lovely country of Trinidad and Tobago where our blog will be based. Hope you enjoy the expression of the various cultures and colours displayed in the video.
Welcome to our blog....we intend to bring exitement to our readers with fun and interactive photographs and videos that will appeal to our Urban geographers. Please enjoy as we will enjoy bringing you this information.

Thanks for viewing- Johanna Reyes
                                    - Jaimeil Agard