SEMINAR SERIES:

SPACES IN COMMON, April 16th – June 11th 2016, Istanbul

 

Organizers: Güldem Baykal Büyüksaraç (Istanbul University), Derya Özkan (LMU University of Munich)

 

One vast reservoir of common wealth is the metropolis itself. The formation of modern cities, as urban and architectural historians explain, was closely linked to the development of industrial capital. The geographical concentration of workers, the proximity of resources and other industries, communication and transport systems, and the other characteristics of urban life are necessary elements for industrial production. Throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries the growth of cities and the qualities of urban space were determined by the industrial factory, its needs, rhythms, and forms of social organization. Today we are witnessing a shift, however, from the industrial to the biopolitical metropolis. And in the biopolitical economy, there is an increasingly intense and direct relation between the production process and the common that constitutes the city. The city, of course, is not just a built environment consisting of buildings and streets and subways and parks and waste systems and communications cables but also a living dynamic of cultural practices, intellectual circuits, affective networks, and social institutions. These elements of the common contained in the city are not only the prerequisite for biopolitical production but also its result; the city is the source of the common and the receptacle into which it flows.

Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri,
Commonwealth (2011: 153-4)

 

This seminar series has been designed as a joint reflection process about the city, with a particular focus on the collectively produced and reproduced commons that sustain urban inhabitants’ livelihoods, affirming their communal instincts. We embrace the concept of “urban commons” for it offers an imagination of the city marked by socio-spatial relations and practices, and allows us to think beyond the public-private and state-market dichotomies. Viewed as such, urban space is where cultures of commoning emerge through its active and creative residents’ quotidian practices, be they work, reproductive labor, or leisure and festivity. It is these practices that make our spaces in common.

Urban common spaces are constantly subject to enclosure for capitalist profit. As a generative force for accumulation, enclosure entails dispossession in various forms: expropriation, evacuation, denying public access to a once common space, etcetera. What equally deserves consideration is cultural enclosures that work to commodify the complex systems of local knowledge and to capitalize (on) collective experiences of meaning-making, a subject that has so far been less debated and undertheorized.

Keeping such processes in mind to re-examine, we would like to discuss the emerging practices of commoning in the city mainly through the case of Istanbul. We treasure these practices, for they imply a radical will to remake not only our city but also ourselves by way of reorganizing our living spaces, redefining forms of production and labor, developing new means of livelihood, and in turn cultivating a new ethos to teach us every day that we all inhabit a common ‘life-world’.

Urban commons are emancipatory to the extent that they challenge capitalist social relationships. It is particularly this aspect of urban commons, and of the commoning practices therein, that we intend to explore throughout these seminars. We would like to dwell on achievements as well as incomplete or conflicting processes and incompatibilities. Can the commons inform the way we imagine an emancipatory future in urban life? What can we learn from comparable practices happening elsewhere in the world? Are there any alternative conceptions to better capture the significance of commoning practices for urban culture? What are the ways for incorporating different sensibilities and perspectives (feminist perspective in particular) into our understanding of urban commons?

 

Spaces in Common, composed of six bi-weekly seminar talks that will run from April 16th to June 11th, 2016, has been planned as part of the DFG Emmy Noether Research Project, ‘Cool Istanbul: From Oriental to the Cool’, hosted by the University of Munich.

 

We have also organized four panels under the title of The Practices of Commoning in Istanbul (on April 30th at Studio-X İstanbul and on May 14th at SALT Galata), with parallel sub-themes to those of the seminar talks. With these panels, we hope to inquire into the possibilities of dialogue and solidarity between activists and theorists, as well as among the local initiatives themselves. It is our intention here to examine to what extent and in what ways the commons theory explains actual experiences of commoning in Istanbul on the one hand, and to search for ways of imagining new forms of production, consumption, exchange, and socialization, on the other.

 

Spaces in Common will be hosted by Ariel Art Center, SALT Galata, and Studio-X Istanbul.

 

SEMINARS (in English)

 

Saturday, April 16, 11:00-13:00, STUDIO-X

Commoning the City: The Right to not be Excluded

Nicholas Blomley

 

Friday, April 29, 18:00-21:00, STUDIO-X

Production in Common

Massimo de Angelis

 

Saturday, April 30, 16-18:00, STUDIO-X

The Challenges and Possibilities of Urban Horticulture

Elke Krasny

 

Saturday, May 14, 17-20:00, SALT Galata

Affective Labour in the City: From Dispossession to Commoning

Emma Dowling

 

Saturday, May 28, 17-19:00, ARIEL Sanat

Beyond the Creative City: Art, Politics and Public Life in the City of the 21st Century

Pascal Gielen

(followed by book launch starting at 19:00)

 

Saturday, June 11, 17-20:00, SALT Galata

Collective Production, Collective Ownership

Peter Linebaugh

 

PANELS: Practices of Commoning in Istanbul (in Turkish)

 

Saturday, April 30, STUDIO-X

11-13:00

Labor and Production in Solidarity

14-16:00

Horticulture, Food and Solidarity

 

Saturday, May 14, SALT Galata

11-13:00

Domestic and Affective Labor

13:30-15:30

Urban Common Property

 

VENUES

 

ARIEL SANAT


Maçka Caddesi 24, Narmanlı Apt. Kat: 2, Nişantaşı 34367 Istanbul

 

STUDIO-X

Meclis-i Mebusan Caddesi 35A, Beyoğlu 34427 Istanbul

 

SALT Galata

Bankalar Caddesi 11, Beyoğlu 34420 Istanbul


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