Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/30212
Title: Whose Sidewalk?
Authors: Kouros, Theodoros 
Major Field of Science: Social Sciences
Field Category: SOCIAL SCIENCES
Keywords: Tactics of inhibition;Symbolic boundaries;Domestic space;Urban sidewalk;Cyprus
Issue Date: 2021
Source: Anthropology of East Europe Review, 2021, vol. 37, iss. 1
Volume: 37
Issue: 1
Journal: Anthropology of East Europe Review 
Abstract: Home is a nodal point in a series of polarities, including family-community; space-place; inside-outside; private-public; domestic-social. These may not be stable but seem both solidified and undermined as they play out their meaning and practice in and through the home. The “public” is traditionally the state’s domain, while the “private” the citizens’. But where does “private” end and “public” begin? Can a border or boundary be placed between the two? Is such a boundary culture-specific or universal? Is it static or dynamic? Scholars often perceive borders as barriers and bridges, porous and impenetrable, and border studies have shown that urban entities have their own internal and external borders. I argue that such internal urban micro-boundaries can be found in the domain of domestic space, separating the private from the public, and that they are dynamic and constantly negotiated. Not necessarily marked, they are acknowledged by a mutual and tacit agreement, a social and cultural consensus. In this paper, I focus on common expansions of private into public space in Limassol, Cyprus, and the ways in which, this social consensus is achieved through the use of several tactics. As I illustrate, all these tactics seem to transform public space into private, on a symbolic level. The paper’s contribution lies in the examination of this type of boundary, which has received little academic attention, as well as in the introduction of the term “tactics of inhibition.”
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/30212
ISSN: 21532931
10544720
DOI: 10.14434/aeer.v37i1.32020
Rights: © Anthropology of East Europe Review
Type: Article
Affiliation : University of Cyprus 
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed
Appears in Collections:Άρθρα/Articles

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