The author would like to thank Dr. Robert Ostergren, Dr. Gonzalez-Quintela and Dr. Vidal, Dr. Robert and Diane Dempsey, Dr. Robert Kaiser, Dr. Kris Olds, Dr. Juan Egea, Dr. Mona Domosh, Dr. Ana Suárez Piñeiro, Conor Dempsey, Stephanie Wilbrand, Marigold Norman, Theresa Nguyen, and the three anonymous reviewers. The Vilas International Travel Grant and the Trewartha International Research Award funded the research fieldwork. Translations are the author's own. IRB approval, University of Wisconsin–Madison #SE–2008–0012.
“GALICIA'S HURRICANE”: ACTOR NETWORKS AND ICONIC CONSTRUCTIONS†
Article first published online: 1 MAR 2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2012.00132.x
© 2012 by the American Geographical Society of New York
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How to Cite
DEMPSEY, K. (2012), “GALICIA'S HURRICANE”: ACTOR NETWORKS AND ICONIC CONSTRUCTIONS. Geographical Review, 102: 93–110. doi: 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2012.00132.x
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Publication History
- Issue published online: 1 MAR 2012
- Article first published online: 1 MAR 2012
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Keywords:
- actor-network theory;
- Galicia;
- iconic structures;
- politics;
- Spain
abstract.
Monumental constructions are created for a purpose, often as a symbolic representation of a particular vision of a people or a place. Spain's Cidade da Cultura, a museum conceptualized by Galicia's former president with the hubristic goal of creating a world icon, is one such example. Like many iconic constructions, the Cidade da Cultura project was highly contentious and sparked a regionwide political debate, vastly overran its projected cost, and years later remains controversial and incomplete. An actor-network theory analysis of why the project failed reveals the different roles played by individual components in the vast network of actors, including the monument itself, which came to exercise influence over the outcome of the project. Because the former president could not fully control this expanding network of actors, events soon spun out of control in what became popularly known as “Galicia's Hurricane.”

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