{"id":470,"date":"2022-02-19T15:51:52","date_gmt":"2022-02-19T15:51:52","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/?p=470"},"modified":"2022-02-19T15:51:52","modified_gmt":"2022-02-19T15:51:52","slug":"can-the-fellow-traveller-ever-belong-uncovering-the-messy-urban-fabric-of-shanghai-through-fellow-traveller-experience","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/2022\/02\/can-the-fellow-traveller-ever-belong-uncovering-the-messy-urban-fabric-of-shanghai-through-fellow-traveller-experience\/","title":{"rendered":"Can the Fellow Traveller Ever Belong? Uncovering the \u2018Messy\u2019 Urban Fabric of Shanghai through Fellow Traveller Experience"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: center\"><em>\u201cI walked back through the streets of this jungle city where detectives and gangsters hunted all men and women who entertained any thoughts other than the official ones. Within half an hour the girl [an activist] would have moved her dwelling and be warning all her friends&#8221;.<\/em><sup><a href=\"#footnote_1_470\" id=\"identifier_1_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Agnes Smedley, Battle Hymn of China, (London, 1944), &lt;https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/in.ernet.dli.2015.207541\/page\/n5\/mode\/2up&gt; [accessed: 11 February 2022], p.56.\">1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The problem of \u201cmessy urbanism\u201d is not one restricted to modern-day theory. Of course, more recently, this concept has been formalised in an edited volume by Manish Chalana and Jeffrey Hou: <em>Messy Urbanism: Understanding the \u2018Other\u2019 Cities of Asia<\/em>.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_2_470\" id=\"identifier_2_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Manish Chalana, Jeffrey Hou, Messy Urbanism: Understanding the &lsquo;Other&rsquo; Cities of Asia, (Hong Kong, 2016).\">2<\/a><\/sup> Here, the contributors aim to look beyond the spatial and imagined construction of East Asian cities and award agency to the informal practices of urban life, which are given meaning as processes which both subvert and interact with formal hierarchies of city planning and organisation. \u201cMessy\u201d urban practices, such as the autonomy of slum dwellers on the periphery of a city, are renewed as a dynamic expression of the inhabitants of the city which constitute its real meaning.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_3_470\" id=\"identifier_3_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Chalana, Hou, Messy Urbanism, p.9.\">3<\/a><\/sup> The authors suggest that the layers of actors and actions revealed by the concept of \u2018messy urbanism\u2019 allow us to view urban life from a diverse, rather than hierarchical perspective. However, the search to understand \u201cconditions and processes which do not follow institutionalised or culturally prescribed notions of order\u201d has long been a task of historians, anthropologists, theorists, and travellers alike.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_4_470\" id=\"identifier_4_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Chalana, Hou, Messy Urbanism, p.1.\">4<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The lament of the \u201cjungle city\u201d above belongs to Agnes Smedley, an American triple agent who worked for the Soviets, Chinese Communists, and the Indian Nationalists. She has been described as a \u201cfellow traveller\u201d- a term coined by Trotsky to describe someone who had Communist sympathies, without actually belonging to the party or nation in question.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_5_470\" id=\"identifier_5_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"DWF Kerr, &lsquo;Agnes Smedley: The Fellow Traveller&rsquo;s Tales&rsquo; in DWF Kerr and J Kuehn (eds), A Century of Travels in China: Critical Essays on Travel Writing from the 1840s to the 1940s, (Hong Kong, 2007), p.1.\">5<\/a><\/sup> The line comes from her monograph <em>Battle Hymn of China<\/em>, which describes China in the midst of the Sino-Japanese War which she witnessed alongside Chinese soldiers and Japanese prisoners of war (POWs).<sup><a href=\"#footnote_6_470\" id=\"identifier_6_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Agnes Smedley, Battle Hymn of China, (London, 1944), &lt;https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/in.ernet.dli.2015.207541\/page\/n5\/mode\/2up&gt; [accessed: 11 February 2022].\">6<\/a><\/sup> Her dedication at the start is \u201cto the soldiers of China: poor, glorious pioneers in the world struggle against Fascism\u201d and is representative of her desire to uncover the lived experiences of the population at the birth of Communism.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_7_470\" id=\"identifier_7_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Agnes Smedley, Battle Hymn, Title Page.\">7<\/a><\/sup> For Smedley, the war created the cultural conditions for the articulation of the lives of the Chinese population, which arguably, she saw as the messy \u201curban fabric\u201d that lay beneath China\u2019s imperialist history.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_8_470\" id=\"identifier_8_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Michel De Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life, (California, 2011), p.47.\">8<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Smedley\u2019s description of underground activists in Shanghai is largely valuable for an accurate representation of &#8220;messy urbanism&#8221;. The war-trodden city is described as a \u201cjungle\u201d, which suggests that the concrete fabric of the city had dissolved in favour of a natural loss of order. Here, Smedley adopts an almost nostalgic tone, as she illuminates the hidden structures of the city which worked toward the Communist resistance. The proletariat is inherently connected with the &#8220;messiness&#8221; of the city to emphasise their origins of poverty and disconnect from the old hierarchical and imperialist vision of Shanghai. Smedley describes this through a contrast between the \u201cdetectives and gangsters\u201d of the government and \u201cmen and women\u201d who can be seen as a personification of the spatial and visual order of the city. The \u201cdetectives and gangsters\u201d enforce order against the messier undercurrents of \u201cmen and women\u201d of resistance, who inhabit the street corners and slums which Smedley describes first-hand. Her account demonstrates how the Communist resistance formed part of the everyday \u201cforms of planning and engagement\u201d with the city, by using street corners to advertise Communist literature and slums to house temporary Communist \u2018libraries\u2019.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_9_470\" id=\"identifier_9_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Chalana, Hou, Messy Urbanism, p.17.\">9<\/a><\/sup> This spatial usurpation was exacerbated by the fact that the perpetrators in the case were not only women, but \u201cgirls\u201d. This heightened the objective sense of urban messiness by removing the female from her traditional role within the house and placing her in a visible position of defiance on the street corner, which she had claimed as her explicitly Communist \u201cdwelling\u201d. These dwellings were significant as an undefined and restricted feature of the city because when their activism was threatened, the girl and her friends simply moved their dwellings and \u201cwarn[ed]\u201d fellow activists through their network of communications which subverted the government\u2019s attempts at restraint. This demonstrates the fluid reality of Shanghai\u2019s urban structures, which did not conform to planning or zoning, but instead provided a flexible foundation for the inhabitants of the city, who defined and utilised the streets according to profession, ideology, and present-time experience or emotion. The changes in the energy, success, and motivation of Communist activists during this period was reflected in the changing makeup of the different districts of the city, as dwellings emerged, moved, or were destroyed. Consequently, Smedley\u2019s account illuminates the \u201cbroader patterns of informalized urban orders\u201d through her description of wartime resistance, which can be characterised as the \u201cmessy\u201d urban fabric of Shanghai in the 1930s.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_10_470\" id=\"identifier_10_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Chalana, Hou, Messy Urbanism, p.5.\">10<\/a><\/sup> Likewise, Smedley\u2019s own text can be seen as an effective form of engagement with this \u201cmessiness\u201d, in which she gives meaning to urban messiness as an immersed witness of emerging Chinese Communism.<\/p>\n<p>Frequently identified as a \u201cfellow traveller\u201d, Agnes Smedley\u2019s grappling between the role of external witness and immersed reporter is representative of the struggle that the \u2018Messy Urbanism\u2019 authors elucidate between the removed ideology of the city and the lived experiences of its inhabitants.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_11_470\" id=\"identifier_11_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Kerr, &lsquo;Agnes Smedley&rsquo;, p.1.&nbsp;\">11<\/a><\/sup> Smedley\u2019s unique role places her between in a gulf between the two, and her text is a continual struggle to represent the \u201cmessy\u201d urban conditions of the rise of Chinese Communism without the impression of an urban, foreign, gaze of misunderstanding- a \u201cparadoxical quest for attachment outside the nation\u201d.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_12_470\" id=\"identifier_12_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Maureen Moynagh, Political Tourism and its Texts, (Toronto, 2008), p.112.\">12<\/a><\/sup> Overall, the text is largely valuable for an understanding of the informal structures and practices of the city, which, as historians, allow us to avoid \u201chistoricising the city instead of doing history inside the city\u201d.<sup><a href=\"#footnote_13_470\" id=\"identifier_13_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-identifier-link\" title=\"Sheetal Chhabria, Making the Modern Slum: The Power of Capital in Colonial Bombay, (2019), p.9\">13<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0<a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\"><\/a><a href=\"#_ftnref3\" name=\"_ftn3\"><\/a><\/p>\n<ol class=\"footnotes\"><li id=\"footnote_1_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Agnes Smedley, <em>Battle Hymn of China<\/em>, (London, 1944), &lt;https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/in.ernet.dli.2015.207541\/page\/n5\/mode\/2up&gt; [accessed: 11 February 2022], p.56. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_1_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_2_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Manish Chalana, Jeffrey Hou, <em>Messy Urbanism: Understanding the \u2018Other\u2019 Cities of Asia<\/em>, (Hong Kong, 2016). <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_2_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_3_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Chalana, Hou, <em>Messy Urbanism<\/em>, p.9. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_3_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_4_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Chalana, Hou, <em>Messy Urbanism<\/em>, p.1. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_4_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_5_470\" class=\"footnote\"> DWF Kerr, &#8216;Agnes Smedley: The Fellow Traveller&#8217;s Tales&#8217; in DWF Kerr and J Kuehn (eds), <em>A Century of Travels in China: Critical Essays on Travel Writing from the 1840s to the 1940s<\/em>, (Hong Kong, 2007), p.1. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_5_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_6_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Agnes Smedley, <em>Battle Hymn of China<\/em>, (London, 1944), &lt;https:\/\/archive.org\/details\/in.ernet.dli.2015.207541\/page\/n5\/mode\/2up&gt; [accessed: 11 February 2022]. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_6_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_7_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Agnes Smedley, <em>Battle Hymn, <\/em>Title Page. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_7_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_8_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Michel De Certeau, <em>The Practice of Everyday Life<\/em>, (California, 2011), p.47. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_8_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_9_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Chalana, Hou, <em>Messy Urbanism<\/em>, p.17. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_9_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_10_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Chalana, Hou, <em>Messy Urbanism<\/em>, p.5. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_10_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_11_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Kerr, &#8216;Agnes Smedley&#8217;, p.1.\u00a0<span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_11_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_12_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Maureen Moynagh, <em>Political Tourism and its Texts<\/em>, (Toronto, 2008), p.112. <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_12_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><li id=\"footnote_13_470\" class=\"footnote\"> Sheetal Chhabria, <em>Making the Modern Slum: The Power of Capital in Colonial Bombay<\/em>, (2019), p.9 <span class=\"footnote-back-link-wrapper\"> [<a href=\"#identifier_13_470\" class=\"footnote-link footnote-back-link\">&#8617;<\/a>]<\/span><\/li><\/ol>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u201cI walked back through the streets of this jungle city where detectives and gangsters hunted all men and women who entertained any thoughts other than the official ones. Within half an hour the girl [an activist] would have moved her dwelling and be warning all her friends&#8221;.1 The problem of \u201cmessy urbanism\u201d is not one [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":10,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-470","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/470","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/10"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=470"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/470\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":476,"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/470\/revisions\/476"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=470"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=470"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.spatialhistory.net\/cities\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=470"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}