2 resultados para Wall Street

em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid


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Why should a progressive planner/urbanist pay attention to the Spanish 15M movement? From a disciplinary standpoint, its most complex and interesting aspect, which could hypothetically be transferred to other contexts (as in fact happened in the Occupy Wall Street and Occupy London movements), is its 'spatiality'. This article analyses the spatial practices of the so called #spanishrevolution, one of the 2011 social movements that showed the possibility for a new collective appropriation and self-management (autogestion) of urban public space. Although the political goals of the movement were vague at the time of its inception, the practices and spatial imaginaries deployed by it have become consolidated and proven to be yet another of its more successful facets in promoting the spreading and organisation of the protest, making it a phenomenon that calls for reflection on the part of urban thinkers and planners.

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RESUMEN. Tres casos de estudio: “Take the square” en la Plaza de Tahrir, El Cairo, “Occupy Wall Street” en la Plaza de Zuccotti Park en New York, y Kreuzberg, barrio subversivo de Berlín; dos acontecimientos situados, una situación que se ha ido consolidando. Éstos son los elementos que conforman una investigación que pretende llegar a definir la espacialidad radical a través de la espontaneidad y de una necesidad de ocupar un lugar por parte de las multitudes y cuerpos creados procesualmente. Aspectos políticos y sociales son el motor de acciones llevadas a cabo por las individuaciones que se materializan en un lugar, se espacializan y llegan a conformar sucesivamente un paisaje. Esto provoca la transmutación de lugares, donde elementos físicos y químicos permiten una equivalencia. Las nuevas proyecciones en base a estas espacialidades radicales generarían una serie de acontecimientos. ABSTRACT. Three case studies: “Take the square” in Cairo’s Tahrir square, “Occupy Wall Street” in Zuccotti Park, New York, and Kreuzberg, subversive neighbourhood in Berlin; two located events, one existent situation. These are the elements that conform a research, which try to define what radical spatiality could be through the spontaneity and the necessity to occupy a place by multitudes and corps created in base of process. Political and social aspects are the engine of actions done by individuations that materialize a place; they spatialize themselves and consequently conform a landscape. These facts commit into the transmutation of places, where elements like physics and chemicals are the tools that allow equivalence. The new projections base on these radical spacialities would generate a set of events.