Spectres of development: corrupted dreams of a chronically emerging Latin American giant

dc.contributor.authorGill, Andréa B.
dc.contributor.supervisorMagnusson, Warren
dc.contributor.supervisorWalker, R.B.J
dc.date.accessioned2015-08-11T18:14:33Z
dc.date.available2015-08-11T18:14:33Z
dc.date.copyright2015en_US
dc.date.issued2015-08-11
dc.degree.departmentDepartment of Political Scienceen_US
dc.degree.levelDoctor of Philosophy Ph.D.en_US
dc.description.abstractLatin America has been envisioned, time and again, as home to the semi-civilized. Or so (post)colonial imaginaries continue to impress upon us in developmental renderings of a New World that has yet to take off. Neither backward (in the ways of a ‘dark continent’) or advanced (as guaranteed by the status of a ‘first world’), its giants are, at best, chronically emerging. This in-between position is acutely exemplified by the Brazilian dilemma of an interminable modernization, responsibilized for curing all of our ills. The most wide-ranging projects of development are mobilized within this context, but the closer that we get to their distinct materializations, the more that they appear to us as mirages of what ought to be rather than what is, measured against the incorruptible standards of a modernity realized somewhere ‘out there’. In this study, I look to everyday dynamics in Brazil’s aspiring world-city, Rio de Janeiro, that compose the fields and subjects on which development projects operate, in turn revealing and obscuring ‘successes’, ‘failures’, and ultimately, assorted desires and expectations that (mis)lead a politics of transformation in the peripheries of the modern world. In Part III, I elaborate this history of the present as a way to reorient such grand narratives of arrested development, corruption, and other ‘third world’ problems, by drawing on a range of sites of sociability that nurture particular kinds of relations between (dis)obedient subjects and their governing institutions. To this end, I reconceive the terms of debate for thinking about places of an allegedly incomplete or corrupted modernity, in Part II, where I largely reframe the problems that a developmental ethos appropriates for itself, which situates the third world as the constitutive outside of idealized ways of living. By investigating the predominant developmental archetypes of the last century of Brazil’s promised take-offs, in Part I, I set up the pathways to decondition and recondition how we think about the limits and possibilities of a peripheral politics of transformation. In these ways, I conclude that the standards of political judgement that follow from such idealized ways of living neutralize contentions and negotiations over how we want to live, here and now, making way for confused desires, expectations, and responsibilities more in line with (inter)nationalist paradigms and prescriptions than the politics of everyday life in out of the way places.en_US
dc.description.proquestcode0615en_US
dc.description.proquestcode0616en_US
dc.description.proquestcode0700en_US
dc.description.proquestemailandrea.b.gill@gmail.comen_US
dc.description.scholarlevelGraduateen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1828/6415
dc.languageEnglisheng
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.rightsAvailable to the World Wide Weben_US
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/*
dc.subjectpostcolonialismen_US
dc.subjectLatin Americaen_US
dc.subjectBrazilen_US
dc.subjectdevelopmenten_US
dc.subjectdemocracyen_US
dc.subjectcorruptionen_US
dc.subjectThird Worlden_US
dc.subjecteducationen_US
dc.subjectmiddle classen_US
dc.subjectcritiqueen_US
dc.subjectnarrativeen_US
dc.subjectmodernizationen_US
dc.subjectglobalizationen_US
dc.titleSpectres of development: corrupted dreams of a chronically emerging Latin American gianten_US
dc.typeThesisen_US

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