TY - BOOK AU - Plaza Azuaje,Penélope ED - Taylor and Francis. TI - Culture as Renewable Oil: How Territory, Bureaucratic Power and Culture Coalesce in the Venezuelan Petrostate T2 - Routledge Research in Place, Space and Politics SN - 9780203701423(e-book : PDF) AV - JL3831 U1 - 320.987 23 PY - 2018/// CY - Boca Raton, FL PB - Routledge KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Geography KW - bisacsh KW - cultural studies KW - culture and oil KW - energy KW - extractive industries KW - latin american energy KW - oil KW - oil industry KW - Petrosocialist Venezuela KW - Petrostate KW - penelope plaza KW - renewable energy KW - Venezuela KW - Venezuelan energy KW - Politics and culture KW - 21st century KW - Petroleum industry and trade KW - History KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Introduction 1. Entanglements of Oil, Modernity, State and Culture in Venezuela 2. Oil in the Intersection between Territory, Bureaucratic Power and Culture as a Resource 3. Territory Effect, the New Geometry of Power and the Construction of a Petro-Socialist State Space 4. Bureaucratic Power, Performative Speech and Oil Policy: Sow the Oil to Harvest Culture 5. Giant Oil Workers and the Expediency of Culture as Renewable Oil Conclusion. The Untenable Utopia of Oil; Also available in print format N2 - This book unpacks the links between oil energy, state power, urban space and culture, by looking at the Petro-Socialist Venezuelan oil state. It challenges the disciplinary compartmentalisation of the analysis of the material and cultural effects of oil to demonstrate that within the Petrostate, Territory, Bureaucratic Power and Culture become indivisible. To this end, it examines how oil is a cultural resource, in addition to a natural resource, implying therefore that struggles over culture implicate oil, and struggles over oil implicate culture. This book develops a story about Venezuela as an oil state and the way it deploys its policies to instrumentalise culture and urban space by examining the way Petro-Socialism manifests in space, how it is imagined in speeches and how it is discursively constructed in adverts. The discussion reveals how a particular culture is privileged by the Venezuela state-owned oil company and its social and cultural branch. The book explores to what effect the state-owned oil company constructs a parallel notion of culture that becomes inextricable from land, akin to a mineral deposit, and tightly controlled by the Petrostate. The book will appeal to researchers who are interested in Resource Management, Environmental Studies, Cultural Studies and Political Geography UR - https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9780203701423 ER -