Tuesday 31 January 2017, 4.00PM to 5.30pm
Speaker(s): Dr Gareth Millington, University of York
Free tickets will be available shortly via Eventbrite
Seminar synopsis
In later work the French sociologist Henri Lefebvre began the task of reconfiguring his earlier and better known notion of 'the right to the city' as a transnational, communications driven mode of revolutionary (urban) citizenship. This talk works through the possibilities of revolutionary citizenship in the city, drawing upon two empirical studies of contemporary urban protest in 'global' London. In each case it is discussed how emergent forms of citizenship must battle with how the democratic spaces of the city are, under neoliberal conditions, becoming increasingly post-political and indifferent or hostile to collective forms of political representation.
Dr Gareth Millington
Gareth Millington is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology, University of York. He is author of two books Urbanization and the Migrant in British Cinema: Spectres of the City and 'Race', Culture and the Right to the City: centres, peripheries, margins (both Palgrave Macmillan) and numerous articles in the field of urban studies.
Location: ARRC Auditorium ARC/014, University of York