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3 - Publics in the Streets: Mombasa’s Street Parliaments

from Part II - Characterising Publics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 May 2021

Stephanie Diepeveen
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

A free and open discussion is always limited. It depends on specific linguistic conventions, forms of expression and norms of social engagement that make mutual understanding possible. Together with Chapter 4, this chapter explores the nature and scope of plural and open discussions in everyday Mombasa. They identify the possibilities and limits on how people might engage in public based on the specific characteristics of discussion. This chapter focuses on street parliaments, which are gatherings that form on the ground both in the central business district and in residential neighbourhoods. Together, these chapters make an important contribution to understanding the openness of publics in Mombasa. They not only show how everyday publics existed in Mombasa, but also differentiate between forms of exclusion. They show how some forms of exclusion prevented public discussion from taking place at all, while others constrained its openness but were refutable or contestable, such as gender.

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Searching for a New Kenya
Politics and Social Media on the Streets of Mombasa
, pp. 63 - 83
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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