This work examines the parallel developments of squatted social centres in Bristol, London, Milan and Rome in depth, covering the last two decades of the twentieth century. They are considered here as a by-product of the emergence of neo-liberalism. Too often studied in the present tense, social centres are analysed here from a diachronic point of view as contextdependent responses to evolving global stimuli. Their ‗journey through time‘ is inscribed within the different English and Italian traditions of radical politics and oppositional cultures. Social centres are thus a particularly interesting site for the development of interdependency relationships – however conflictual – between these traditions. The innovations brought forward by post-modernism and neo-liberalism are reflected in the centres‘ activities and modalities of ‗social‘ mobilisation. However, centres also voice a radical attitude towards such innovation, embodied in the concepts of autogestione and Do-it-Yourself ethics, but also through the reinstatement of a classist approach within youth politics. Comparing the structured and ambitious Italian centres to the more informal and rarefied English scene allows for commonalities and differences to stand out and enlighten each other. The individuation of common trends and reciprocal exchanges helps to smooth out the initial stark contrast between local scenes. In turn, it also allows for the identification of contextbased specificities in the interpretation of local and global phenomena
Date of Award | 2019 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Arddun Arwyn (Supervisor) |
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- squatting
- social centres
- right to the city
- urban history
- gentrification
- neoliberlism
Squatted social centres in England and Italy in the last decades of the twentieth century
D'Errico, G. (Author). 2019
Student thesis: Doctoral Thesis › Doctor of Philosophy