Everyday Utopias: The Conceptual Life of Promising Spaces

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Duke University Press, Feb 3, 2014 - Social Science - 296 pages
Everyday utopias enact conventional activities in unusual ways. Instead of dreaming about a better world, participants seek to create it. As such, their activities provide vibrant and stimulating contexts for considering the terms of social life, of how we live together and are governed. Weaving conceptual theorizing together with social analysis, Davina Cooper examines utopian projects as seemingly diverse as a feminist bathhouse, state equality initiatives, community trading networks, and a democratic school where students and staff collaborate in governing. She draws from firsthand observations and interviews with participants to argue that utopian projects have the potential to revitalize progressive politics through the ways their innovative practices incite us to rethink mainstream concepts including property, markets, care, touch, and equality. This is no straightforward story of success, however, but instead a tale of the challenges concepts face as they move between being imagined, actualized, hoped for, and struggled over. As dreaming drives new practices and practices drive new dreams, everyday utopias reveal how hard work, feeling, ethical dilemmas, and sometimes, failure, bring concepts to life.
 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
2 Toward a Utopian Conceptual Attitude
24
3 Casting Equality and the Touch of State Governance
45
4 Public Nudism and the Pursuit of Equality
73
5 Unsettling Feminist Care Ethics through a Womens and Trans Bathhouse
100
6 Normative Time and the Challenge of Community Labor in Local Exchange Trading Schemes
129
7 Property as Belonging at Summerhill School
155
8 Market Play at Speakers Corner
186
9 Conclusion
217
Notes
229
References
251
Index
277
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About the author (2014)

Davina Cooper is Professor of Law and Political Theory at Kent Law School at the University of Kent in Canterbury, England. She is the author of Challenging Diversity: Rethinking Equality and the Value of Difference; Governing Out of Order: Space, Law and the Politics of Belonging; and Power in Struggle: Feminism, Sexuality and the State.

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