Abstract

ABSTRACT Festive rituals have been analyzed as rituals of interaction with great capacity to generate group membership and economic impact. However, the conflictual dimension of these rituals should be taken into account, as festive rituals are also spaces of conflict and exclusion. In this sense, ritual festivities can lead to urban cohesion and the generation of local identities, but they can also reinforce internal social divisions, reproducing social inequalities and expressing the social hegemony of the dominant elites. In this sense, the fallas of Valencia constitute a carnivalesque festive ritual that shows exactly these effects, since the organization of the fallas commissions represents one of the city’s principal forms of social participation and cohesion, but at the same time reproduces the social hierarchization of urban districts. Thus, one of the main formats is found in the stratification by neighborhoods. The fallas reflect the economic strength of the traditionally socially dominant neighborhoods, but also show the emergence of new high-income neighborhoods, with new commissions defined by high resources. In this way, studying the fallas is a way of studying the urban hierarchy of Valencia, as they have gone hand in hand throughout the period studied.

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