Home / Humanities / Arts/Music / Architecture / Common Space: The City as Commons

Common Space: The City as Commons

AUTHOR
Price
€23.90
€26.60 -10%
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

How often do we consider the availability of shared, public space in our daily lives? Governmental efforts in place—such as anti-homeless spikes, slanted bus benches, and timed sprinklers—are all designed to discourage use of already severely limited public areas. How we interact with space in a modern context, particularly in urban settings, can feel increasingly governed and blocked off from common everyday encounters.With Common Space, activist and architect Stavros Stavrides calls for a reconceiving of public and private space in the modern age. Stavrides appeals for a new understanding of common space not only as something that can be governed and open to all, but as an essential aspect of our world that expresses, encourages, and exemplifies new forms of social relations and shared experiences. He shows how these spaces are created, through a fascinating global examination of social housing, self-built urban settlements, street peddlers, and public art and graffiti. The first book to explicitly tackle the notion of the city as commons, Common Space, offers an insightful study into the links between space and social relations, revealing the hidden emancipatory potential within our urban worlds.

Author: Stavridis Stavros
Publisher: ZED BOOKS
Pages: 320
ISBN: 9781350435162
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2023

Foreword
Introduction
Part I: Commoning Space
1. An Urban Archipelago of Enclosures
2. Expanding Commoning: In, Against and Beyond Capitalism?

Part II: Inhabited Common Spaces
3. Shared Heterotopias: Learning From the History of a Social Housing Complex in Athens
4. Housing and Urban Commoning
5. Metropolitan Streets as Contested Spaces
6. Occupied Squares, Societies in Movement

Part III: Envisaged common spaces
7. Practices of Defacement: Thresholds to Rediscovered Commons
8. Thought-images and Representations of the City as Commons
9. Representations of Space and Representations of Emancipation

Conclusion: Reinventing the City through Commoning

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist