Trashing the Neoliberal City: Autonomous Cultural Practices in Chicago From 2000-2006
Edited by Emily Forman and Daniel Tucker
Copenhagen: Learning Site, 2007
Pages: 31
Dimensions: 8.13 in x 10.56 in
Cover: soft
Binding: staple-bound
Process: digital
Color: two-color throughout
Edition Size: unknown
ISBN: 87-92065-00-7
"We need an exciting new energy that challenges who will live in the city, who will benefit from its growth and development, and who will get to participate in fundamental decisions affecting economic, cultural, and social life. What we need is a space to contest whose city Chicago will be." - Pauline Lipman's essay from the publication entitled "Whose City Is It Anyways?"
Chicago is a post-industrial success story. At least that is what the spring 2006 special feature article on the 3rd largest city in the United States had to say about the matter. Increasingly cities, especially those that qualify as "Global Cities" of significant importance to the world economic stage, compete for success in terms of quality of life for white collar service workers and the so-called Creative Class and to facilitate the proper business climate to satisfy the needs of globalized capital. Other characteristics include the privatization of services previously managed by the state and the deregulation of labor and markets. Aspects of this contemporary phase of neoliberal capitalism are new, while some are as old as the free market itself. When we look at the implications of such a moment in time on a single city, many questions about the social impact on precarious residents arise. This publication catalogues a diverse range of cultural projects that responded to and questioned the state of social and political life in Chicago at the turn of the century.
The projects in this publication raise fundamental questions about our right to the city and the possible uses of culture in the struggle for community self-determination: How do we want to interact with our neighbors? What kinds of reforms do we want from the state and what kinds of collective infrastructures should we be building ourselves instead? What kinds of spaces encourage resistance, free movement and the well being of the whole population?
Most of the work featured in this publication has never been published or seen in print. For the first time, seventeen of the most compelling self-organized projects, events and initiatives from Chicago's recent past have been catalogued together to present a document of a unique period of cultural activism. Only the surface is scratched with 1-3 pages dedicated to each individual project, yet we get a sense of the projects essence and motivation through the inclusion of original press releases and reproductions of promotional materials as well as documentation. The work is divided up into three sections which attempt to organize the work according to it's most significant themes. The sections are "The Right to the City" featuring work that deals with housing and gentrification, "Protest Experiments" that address the policing of public space and dissent, and "Social Reorganization" which offers alternative contexts for gathering and relating to strangers, friends and collaborators in times of intense alienation and social isolation.
Projects Featured in the Publication:
Right to the City
Pioneer Renewal Trust: Fake real-estate company is formed to trick and lure greedy developers.
Daley Village: New housing development of cardboard shanties baring the mayor's identity.
Principality of Podmajersky: When one family owns and dictates the culture of an entire neighborhood.
Artists Against Artist Housing: Addressing the appropriation of the 'creative class' to push out poor residents.
Real World Protests What happens with MTV comes to town and turns the neighborhood into a studio.
CHAos: Fighting spin with spin, this project takes on the state of public housing after privatization.
Protest Experiments
Haymarket 8-Hour Action Series: Ambitious projects addressing the erasure of labor history in public
God Bless Graffiti Coalition: Addressing the policing and aesthetic control of public space
Pink Bloque: Turning protests into dance parties
Department of Space and Land Reclamation: A campaign to take back space, land and visual culture in city
Feel Tank Chicago: Group held the 1st annual International Day of Politically Depressed
Trans-Atlantic Business Dialogue: Series of public projects and graphic campaigns around free-trade meetings
Social Reorganization
Pilot TV: A temporary television studio for independent media production and collaboration
Autonomous Territories of Chicago : Festival of radical culture and critical response to war
ASK ME!: What would happen if everyone was an expert and got treated as such by the general public
iNfo-eXpo: Networking fair for art/activist groups based on the model of a science fair booth