Vol. 23 No. 2 (2014): Nordic Journal of African Studies
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Movement as Mediation: Envisioning a Divided Nigerian City

Ulrika Trovalla
The Nordic Africa Institute
Victor Adetula
University of Jos
Eric Trovalla
The Nordic Africa Institute
Nordic Journal of African Studies

Published 2014-06-30

How to Cite

Trovalla, U., Adetula, V., & Trovalla, E. (2014). Movement as Mediation: Envisioning a Divided Nigerian City. Nordic Journal of African Studies, 23(2), 17. https://doi.org/10.53228/njas.v23i2.149

Abstract

Since its establishment in the beginning of the twentieth century, the inhabitants of the ethnically and religiously diverse Nigerian city of Jos have inhabited very different places and travelled along opposite trails – patterns that in recent years, with an escalation of violence, have gained new dimensions. By bringing people’s movements into focus, this article highlights how movement comes in different ways to mediate between people and a city in flux. Brought to light is how movement in several different modalities – fast, slow, in total arrest; clothed in Christian or Muslim attires; by car, on foot, or on horseback; assertive or explorative, in triumph as well as in fear – by mediating between people and the city, brings forth a metaphysical landscape that otherwise is hard to get hold of. In this vein, movement as a medium has become a form of ‘social envisioning’ – a tool for understanding and foretelling the city.