Re-politicizing the urban: Commoning technicities in Hong Kong's Umbrella Movement

Gerhard Bruyns, Stavros Kousoulas

Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference proceedings/Edited volumeChapterScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Formally called “Occupy Central with Love and Peace” the 2014 Umbrella Movement was a civil undertaking that dominated Hong Kong’s urban landscape for a period of 81 days. This period of unrest expressed a collective spatial claim across the entire Hong Kong territory. With the streets as the primary medium of protest, the protesters barricaded bridges, flyovers and any available form of accessible spaces within their collective and material body of protest. The extraction of political debate away from the private realm, from the containment of a widespread interiority, brought political difference within the urban arteries of the world’s third densest city.

This chapter approaches the commons as processes of re-politicizing urban space. We examine the material realities that catalyzed the Umbrella Movement to explain four key aspects. First, we outline the premise of collective actions and the discourse of the commons, before linking their emergence to the spatial particularities of territories and in this case, Hong Kong’s Special Administrative Region. After that, we explore the notions of interiority and exteriority, not as fixed spatial terms but as animated and interchangeable conditions whereby culture and technology merge to allow for the (un)folding of affective and transformative practices of commoning technicities. It is through a folded and membranic understanding of the relation between the interior and the exterior that we posit the importance of the Umbrella Movement as an urban event: its attempt to re-politicize the urban by bringing its interiorized past in touch with an exteriorized future.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Routledge Handbook of Architecture, Urban Space and Politics
Subtitle of host publicationEcology, Social Participation and Marginalities
EditorsNikolina Bobic, Farzaneh Haghighi
PublisherRoutledge - Taylor & Francis Group
Chapter4
Pages62-76
Number of pages15
Volume2
ISBN (Electronic)9781003112471
ISBN (Print)9780367629182, 9780367631949
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

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Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.

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