Social Change and Everyday Life in the Spatial Arts
A special issue of Architecture (ISSN 2673-8945).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 August 2024) | Viewed by 3117
Special Issue Editors
Interests: urban studies; urban methodology; urban pedagogy; planning theory; architecture theory; ethnography of construction sites; open, civic and public innovation
Interests: territorial and urban regeneration; community engagement; bottom-up and self-organized approaches; decision-making processes; public space; civic economies and innovative businesses
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Architecture, landscape planning and urban design, like many other disciplines pertaining to the spatial arts, have witnessed a decade of unsettling events: the Global Financial Crisis of 2008, the global insurgent movement of 2011, the refugee crisis (since 2015), new authoritarian state leadership (since 2016), climate crisis protests (since 2018), the COVID-19 pandemic (since 2019/20), and now, the political and civic upheaval of undemocratic and democratic character in many cities and countries worldwide, including a new aggressive war in the Northern hemisphere. While the city and the urban public realm are considered key arenas to overcome these bifurcations, the potential of deep critique and the social, cultural, and political theorization of everyday life and of lived space to decipher the complexities, ambivalences and deep potentialities of social change have not yet been unlocked in the field of architecture and planning, in terms of theory and praxis. This Special Issue aims to address key concerns to realign architecture theory, planning theory, and deeper conceptual insights on everyday life and lived space to begin deciphering massive shifts in contemporary everyday life, particularly with regard to the social, cultural and political dimensions of the built environment. It invites international contributions which seek to critically reflect or overcome Eurocentric or Anglocentric perspectives, and invites contributions theorizing on the manifold relations between urban life and urban form, their politics, cultures and social aspects, in close relation to intersectional empirical field research on public spaces, urban cultures and everyday life in the fields of architecture, planning and urban design.
Prof. Dr. Sabine Knierbein
Dr. Stefania Ragozino
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- everyday life
- lived space
- the political
- politics
- urban studies
- social change
- public space
- private space
- unsettled urban condition
- urban studies
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