Henri Lefebvre and Planetary Urbanization
Lecture by Andy Merrifield
6.15pm Wedensday 5th October
Christopher Ingold Auditorium, University College London
20 Gordon Street London WC1H 0AJ
In Le droit a la ville and La revolution urbaine, Henri Lefebvre projected the urban trajectory of his day into the sci-fi imaginary of Isaac Asimov's remarkable Foundation saga. Lefebvre had already begun hinting at a new reality: not just of expanding cities, nor even of a new urban reality, but something vaster and more immense again: planetary urbanization.
Today, four decades on, Asimov's extraterrestrial universe seems closer than ever to home: planetary urbanization is creating a whole new spatial world (dis)order. But how to reclaim the shapeless, formless, and apparently boundless metropolis as a theoretical object and political object of progressive struggle?
Andy Merrifeld's essay, 'The right to the city and beyond: Notes on a Lefebvrian re-conceptualization', was recently published in CITY (15.3-4, 2011). Merrifield's use of Asimov's fiction is another example of how he likes to use literature to frame certain ideas, as he did with Marquez and Joyce's Finnegans Wake in Magical Marxism, for thinking about the politics of encounter. Dr Andy Merrifield's recent publications have included Metromarxism: A Marxist Tale of the City (2002), Guy Debord (2005), Henri Lefebvre : A Critical Introduction (2006) and Magical Marxism: Subversive Politics and the Imagination
This public lecture will be the third in a series jointly organised by the journal CITY in conjuction with UCL Urban Laboratory and the support of the Bartlett School of Planning.