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Overview

At first glance, contemporary popular culture, filled with bleak images of the future, seems to have given up on the possibility of positive collective change. Below the surface, however, alternative culture is rife with artist-led projects, activist movements, and subcultural communities of interest that seek to spark the collective imagination and to encourage hunger for alternatives. More playfully self-conscious than past utopian movements, today’s are often whimsical or ironic, but are still entirely earnest. Artists invite us to re-author city maps, or archive individual ideas for the future, while maker collectives urge us to rethink our relationship to consumer goods. All seem to have grown out of a similar do-it-yourself ethos and alternative culture. One of the central conflicts informing these case studies is that while it remains immensely difficult to envision anything outside of the current system of consumer capitalism, there is nevertheless a powerful desire to take it apart in piecemeal ways. We see the longing for new social and political narratives, new forms of communion and sociability, and new imaginings of the possible, longings that are currently unmet by mainstream culture, but that are taking expression in myriad ways at the local level. Taken as a whole, this collection examines what our grand ideals and playful daydreams tell us about ourselves.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498523899
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 12/22/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 290
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Amber Day is associate professor in the English and Cultural Studies Department at Bryant University

Table of Contents

Introduction
Introduction: Creative Play and Collective Imagination
Amber Day
Imagination and Play: Asking “What If?”
  1. Opening up Utopia
Stephen Duncombe
  1. Civic Imagination and A Useless Map
Catherine D’Ignazio
  1. Implausible Futures for Unpopular Places
Rob Walker
DIY Subcultures
  1. Repair Events and the Fixer Movements: Fixing the World One Repair at a Time
Lorenzo Giannini
  1. Our Knowledge is our Market: Consuming the DIY World
Jeremy Hunsinger
  1. DIY Radio Utopia: What is So Funny About the Tragedy of the Commons
Linda Doyle and Jessica Foley
Protests and Peripheries
  1. Remaking Street Corners as “Bureaux”: DIY Youth Spaces and Shifting Urban Ontologies in Guinea
Clovis Bergère
  1. Whose City? Art and Public Space in Providence
Martha Kuhlman
  1. Livestream Production and Livestream Community in the Black Lives Matter Movement
Chenjerai Kumanyika
Popular Culture and Utopia
  1. Making Do and Mending - Domestic Television in The Age of Austerity: Kirstie Allsopp’s Kirstie’sHomemade Home
Deborah Philips
  1. Everyday Utopias, Technological Dystopias, and the Failed Occupation of the Global Modern: Dwell Magazine Meets Unhappy Hipsters
Joan Faber McAlister and Giorgia Aiello
  1. “Change Your Underwear, Change the World:” Entrepreneurial Activism and the Fate of Utopias in an Era of Ethical Capital
Lisa Daily
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