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Owning the Horizon

Delhi, Monumental Power, and the Architecture of Exclusion Cities are often described as archives of civilization. Their streets, monuments, rivers, and skylines supposedly preserve the memory of collective life. Yet some capitals reveal something darker: they are archives not merely of culture, but of organized power. Delhi is one such city. To study Delhi seriously is to confront a recurring historical pattern stretching from the Delhi Sultanate to the Mughal Empire, from the British Raj to the modern Indian republic. Across radically different ideologies and ruling classes, one instinct remains astonishingly constant: the sequestration of land to spatially elevate the state above society. Fortresses, ceremonial boulevards, diplomatic enclaves, bungalow zones, ministry corridors, surveillance grids, and hyper-secured administrative districts all express a single underlying proposition—that sovereignty must dominate the horizon. This is not merely an Indian story. Paris, Londo...

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