Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Citizenship and the Good Life
- 2 Spaces of the Prudent Self
- 3 The Biopolitics of Sexuality and the Hypothesis of an Erotic Art: Foucault and Psychoanalysis
- 4 Elective Spaces: Creating Space to Care
- 5 Interpreting Dao (道) between ‘Way-making’ and ‘Be-wëgen’
- 6 Constructing Each Other: Contemporary Travel of Urban-Design Ideas between China and the West
- 7 A Tale of Two Courts: The Interactions of the Dutch and Chinese Political Elites with their Cities
- 8 Urban Acupuncture: Care and Ideology in the Writing of the City in Eleventh-Century China
- 9 The Value and Meaning of Temporality and its Relationship to Identity in Kunming City, China
- 10 Junzi (君子), the Confucian Concept of the ‘Gentleman’, and its Influence on South Korean Land-Use Planning
- 11 Home Within Movement: The Japanese Concept of Ma (間): Sensing Space-time Intensity in Aesthetics of Movement
- 12 The Concept of ‘Home’: The Javanese Creative Interpretation of Omah Bhetari Sri: A Dialogue between Tradition and Modernity
- Afterword
- Index
- Publications / Asian Cities
2 - Spaces of the Prudent Self
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Citizenship and the Good Life
- 2 Spaces of the Prudent Self
- 3 The Biopolitics of Sexuality and the Hypothesis of an Erotic Art: Foucault and Psychoanalysis
- 4 Elective Spaces: Creating Space to Care
- 5 Interpreting Dao (道) between ‘Way-making’ and ‘Be-wëgen’
- 6 Constructing Each Other: Contemporary Travel of Urban-Design Ideas between China and the West
- 7 A Tale of Two Courts: The Interactions of the Dutch and Chinese Political Elites with their Cities
- 8 Urban Acupuncture: Care and Ideology in the Writing of the City in Eleventh-Century China
- 9 The Value and Meaning of Temporality and its Relationship to Identity in Kunming City, China
- 10 Junzi (君子), the Confucian Concept of the ‘Gentleman’, and its Influence on South Korean Land-Use Planning
- 11 Home Within Movement: The Japanese Concept of Ma (間): Sensing Space-time Intensity in Aesthetics of Movement
- 12 The Concept of ‘Home’: The Javanese Creative Interpretation of Omah Bhetari Sri: A Dialogue between Tradition and Modernity
- Afterword
- Index
- Publications / Asian Cities
Summary
Abstract
This paper seeks an understanding of the city through the formulations of spatial features stemming from the prudent self, which are constructed differently in China and in Greco-Roman conceptions. Space, caution, and foresight are intertwined in the spatial production of the city; here, the most profound force shaping the city is often the most intimate to the body as it takes care of itself. The body constructed in relation to perceived risk and safety not only formulates its own physical characteristics (i.e., the combatant body versus the body in safety), but also strategizes how to obtain protection in its immediate spatial context (i.e., openness versus concealment). These modes of spatial production result in enormously complex but conceptually distinctive decisions with regard to encirclement, access, and the articulation of large amounts of architecture that enable and perpetuate urban life. More importantly, these modes of spatial production are accompanied by patterns of moral and aesthetic cultivation that underpin the political, economic, and cultural institutions of the city. Ideas of prudence, despite their illusive nature in theory and in practice, command an important role in simultaneously explicating the physical construction of urban space and the moral and aesthetic constructs of cultural practices.
Keywords: prudence, China, city, safety, care
Among all ancient human concerns—the fertility of the body, the peacefulness of society, and the goodness of the cosmos—nothing seems to be as divergent as the formulations of the ideas of prudence. We may be enthusiastic about radical cultural change, but cultures are exceptionally stable structures: many deeper cultural structures do not seem to change, even though their surface appearances constantly adapt to outside influences. Prudence appears to be at the heart of the formation of one of these very stable structures of culture; foresight and caution are central to life, and the practice of the care of the self results from perception of emerging danger identified by foresight. While there is hardly a precise measure for the right amount of prudence—too much of it hinders one's ability to secure resources in a competitive environment; too little of it exposes oneself to destruction—civilizations make distinct choices based on what may be seen as their preferred ‘resource strategies’.
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- Information
- Ancient and Modern Practices of Citizenship in Asia and the WestCare of the Self, pp. 47 - 62Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018