Description
The growing of urban population and the rapid change of urban environments, accelerated even more in the current century, entails challenges to defining and practising public spaces in cities. The public space, its implications and accompanied expectations, its embodiment and consequent social impacts, have been the focus of ongoing theorisation and debates. Ideally, the dynamics of gathering in and passing through urban public spaces, indoor and outdoor –from streets, squares, parks, libraries, museums, to other cultural and leisure centres – could lead to a culture more open to differences. Yet, in our time, governmental power and the force of privatisation have been inflicted upon these spaces, squeezed not only the public space itself, but the freedom of citizens. Meanwhile, the burgeoning migration and tourism have given rise to multiculturalism. Social members, when sharing the same space, are confronted with the tasks of existing or interacting with behaviours acted out of different sets of codes. Is it possible to identify a particular kind of urban public space that is capable of strengthening tolerance towards the ‘other’? How can we understand the centrality of urban public spaces in shaping civic behaviours and political actions in our cities? What broader ideologies, interests, histories, and narratives does the urban public space possibly involve and correspond in the context that you come from? These concerns form the basis of this interdisciplinary conference of City, Public Space, and Body. We invite papers reflecting upon relevant issues.Discussion needs to continue as the transformation of cityscapes never ceases. The pandemic crisis, for instance, has pushed and required adaptations in terms of regulating public spaces and policing users’ behaviours. Social distancing becomes an essential practice for coexistence in shared spaces. Its governance and embodiment have become highly visible since the outbreak of the Covid-19 in 2020. In the exercising of social distancing in both everyday situations and extraordinary occasions, we see notions and practices of the body and the public space have rapidly changed. What does the body in the public space mean today? Where and how does the body, of individual as well as of the collective, occupy in the process of negotiating stance and distance in the public space?
In the process of thought exchange, leading to the proposal of this conference, it is discovered, unsurprisingly yet still strongly stimulating, that ideas such as city and public space are used – sometimes vastly – dissimilarly by each participant. That results from divergent life trajectories, social backgrounds, understanding of histories, and political concerns. This is followed by various approaches towards reflecting on often overlapping qualities of ‘city-ness’ and ‘public-ness’. Consequently, the body as a performing agent in the public space is observed and theorised in disparate manners. Cross-cultural dialogue is thus felt deeply needed. Contextualised elaboration of social distance is appealed for.
Period | 14 Dec 2021 → 15 Dec 2021 |
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Event type | Conference |
Location | London, United KingdomShow on map |
Degree of Recognition | International |
Keywords
- City
- Culture-led recommoning
Documents & Links
Related content
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Activities
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Co-making Futures: How Do Universities, Publics and Cultural Organisations Create Equitable Cities?
Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Participation in conference
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BiblioTech Symposium, Exhibition Research Lab Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK),
Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Participation in conference
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How to talk to the city: public interventions and observations in the practice of art and ethnography
Activity: Talk or presentation › Invited talk
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Research output
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This City Does Not Exist How to practise the culture-led re- commoning of cities
Research output: Practice-Based and Non-textual Research › Artefact
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How to Practice Culture-led Recommoning, 2022, Marker on tarpaulin and plywood
Research output: Practice-Based and Non-textual Research › Artefact
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On Trying to be Collective
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Collective Nouns II (Reflections on Commoning).
Research output: Practice-Based and Non-textual Research › Artefact