Print

Print


*CALL FOR CHAPTERS*

*COMMONING THE CITY*

*COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES FROM ISTANBUL AND BEYOND//*

**

*Güldem Baykal Büyüksaraç & Derya Özkan (eds.)*

This edited volume has its roots in /Spaces in Common/, a seminar series 
realized in Istanbul in the Spring of 2016, where a group of academics 
and activists were invited to think together about forms of urban living 
created through acts of commoning –spaces imagined and lived as urban 
commons, belonging to no one and everyone.

The proposed collection of papers similarly aims to reflect upon urban 
inhabitants’ commoning practices that produce and reproduce life in the 
city for the sake of cultivating a new ethos to sustain livelihoods and 
affirm communal instincts beyond motivations of profit, competition, and 
wealth spared for individual well-being at the expense of others. These 
practices develop a culture of commoning that helps imagine a city 
marked by alternative socio-spatial relations and practices. Such 
imagery is possible only with active and creative urban inhabitants 
immersed in cultures of commoning through their quotidian practices, be 
they work, reproductive labor, or leisure and festivity. It is these 
practices that make our spaces in common despite (and in the midst of) 
capitalist social relationships. We embrace the concept of urban commons 
as it allows us to think beyond the public-private and state-market 
dichotomies that are the building blocks of capitalist social formations.

Urban space is 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, commodification of culture, etcetera. The dystopic 
conditions of neoliberal urbanism underlying these processes have until 
now received due scholarly attention. What equally deserves 
consideration, and yet has been less debated and undertheorized, is the 
very acts of commoning that escape the capitalist logic, materialize 
within the cracks of the capitalist system and potentially create new 
life-forms. This volume wants to highlight such commoning practices that 
are affirmative of the possibility of an urban life beyond capitalist 
social relationships.

We treasure practices of commoning, for they not only reveal urban 
inhabitants’ capacity to make the city but they also imply a radical 
will to remake ourselves and our lives by way of reorganizing our living 
spaces, redefining forms of production and labor, developing new means 
of livelihood, and in turn reminding us every day that we all inhabit a 
common life-world.

In this edited volume, we explore the extent to which urban life forms 
created through commoning challenge capitalist social relationships. We 
highlight both achievements and drawbacks. We dwell on the emancipatory 
potentials of these practices, as well as the incomplete or conflicting 
processes and incompatibilities they inhabit. We focus on cases of urban 
commoning while keeping an eye on their continuous enclosures. What are 
some of the ways in which we can imagine and sustain our ongoing 
everyday lives as a locus of commoning? What kinds of sensibilities and 
perspectives (for instance a feminist perspective) can we incorporate 
into our understanding of urban commons?

This volume aims to discuss these questions by bringing together case 
studies in different urban contexts and theoretical perspectives on 
emergent forms of production, consumption, exchange, and sociality, all 
relying on practices of commoning as their major resource.

We are calling for empirically informed and/or theoretical papers that 
offer refreshing perspectives on the following:

* Precarity and resistance

* Solidarity economies

* Commoning arts & culture in the city

* Commoning and law

* Commoning and affective labor in the city

* Experiences of commoning urban property

* Sustainable urban life

Please send abstracts (of 500 words) by May 1st^to Derya Özkan 
([log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>) and Güldem 
Baykal Büyüksaraç ([log in to unmask] 
<mailto:[log in to unmask]>).//

**


_______________________________________________________
[log in to unmask]
An urban geography discussion and announcement forum
List Archives: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/URB-GEOG-FORUM
Maintained by: RGS-IBG Urban Geography Research Group
UGRG Home Page: http://www.urban-geography.org.uk