Time to Think
Over the course of this series, we’ve talked about the importance of education beyond the university. We've taken you to a public park, a cathedral, an art gallery, a library, a living room, a laundromat and to the streets. But universities do matter, as institutions and as places. In our final episode, we visit two – Goldsmiths, University of London, and Bard College Berlin – and listen to conversations taking place in- and outside their lecture halls. First, host Agata Lisiak travels to Goldsmith’s Centre for Urban and Community Research to take part in an event with sociologists Emma Jackson, Yasmin Gunaratnam and Suzanne Hall. They discuss how community and care can be practised in academia despite its hostile and discouraging structures. Then, from Berlin, political scientist Aysuda Kölemen discusses threats to academic freedom posed by authoritarian regimes and neoliberal universities alike. Sociologist Aslı Vatansever tells us more about academic labour activism in Germany, where over 90% of academics work on precarious fixed-term contracts.Episode Credits Host: Agata LisiakGuests: Yasmin Gunaratnam, Suzanne Hall, Emma Jackson, Aysuda Kölemen, Aslı VatanseverWriter and Producer: Agata LisiakSenior Editor: Susan Stone Sound Producer: Reece CoxMusic: Studio RArtwork: Bose SarmientoIn partnership with: The Sociological Review FoundationFunded by: Volkswagen FoundationFind more about Spatial Delight at The Sociological Review. Episode ResourcesDoreen Massey’s work quoted or mentioned in this episode:Time to Think, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 26.2 (2001): 257-261.A Global Sense of Place, Marxism Today, 1991.Kilburn Manifesto: After Neoliberalism? 2015.Vocabularies of the Economy, Kilburn Manifesto, 2015.Also mentioned:Centre for Urban and Community Research, Goldsmiths, University of LondonNew university job cuts fuel rising outrage on campuses, Anna Fazackerley, The Guardian, 24 October 2021Open Letter to Frances Corner The Migrant’s Paradox: Street Livelihoods and Marginal Citizenship in Britain, Suzanne M. Hall (University of Minnesota Press, 2021)Academic Freedom and Precarity in the Global North: Free as a Bird, ed. Aslı Vatansever and Aysuda Kölemen (Routledge, 2022)At the Margins of Academia: Exile, Precariousness, and Subjectivity, Aslı Vatansever (Brill, 2020)Network for Decent Labour in AcademiaThe Dead Ladies ShowUncommon Sense: Cities, with Romit Chowdhury, 2022More resources available at The Sociological Review
Invasión Espacial
Geografes como Doreen Massey argumentan que el espacio es producido socialmente. En este episodio hablamos de la producción del espacio por cuerpas migrantes y escuchamos del carnaval cómo una perfecta invasión espacial.Bose Sarmiento, artista feminista, nos transporta a las calles de Berlín durante el 8 de Marzo. El día en que las protestas del día internacional de la mujer toman la ciudad. En el caos de las demostraciones, se deja llevar por la música para encontrar a la Marea Abya Yala. Lo que guía este episodio es la curiosidad acerca de la musicalidad que rodea la protesta latinoamericana. ¿Cómo suena? ¿Cuál es su rol en la protesta? ¿De dónde surge esta “negociación del espacio" cómo la llamaría Massey, y qué espacios produce? Para adentrarse en ello, Bose habla con la antropóloga y bailarina, Cristina Barría Knopf, una de las líderes de la colectiva Comparsa Carnaval en Berlín. Allí, Cristina nos habla del carnaval, un rito de suma importancia en Abya Yala. Por años, era durante el carnaval, que las raíces originarias lograban permear la cultura de dominación colonial. Hoy en Berlín, durante las protestas del 8M, la Comparsa trae ese rito de resistencia y alienta a mujeres y disidencias a ocupar el espacio público, les alienta a sostener la diferencia. Episode Credits Host: Bose SarmientoGuest: Ana Cristina Barría KnopfWriter: Bose SarmientoProducer: Agata LisiakSound Producer: Bose SarmientoMusic: Studio RArtwork: Bose SarmientoSpecial Thanks: All the Abya Yala collectives making noise at demonstrationsIn partnership with: The Sociological Review FoundationFunded by: Volkswagen FoundationFind more about Spatial Delight at The Sociological ReviewEpisode ResourcesDoreen Massey’s work quoted or mentioned in this episode:Space, Place and Gender (Polity Press, 1994)For Space (Sage, 2005)A Global Sense of Place, Marxism Today, 1991Recommended resources:Space Invaders: Race, Gender and Bodies Out of Place, Nirmal Puwar (Bloomsbury, 2004)Performance, Diana Taylor (Duke University Press, 2016)The Archive and the Repertoire, Diana Taylor (Duke University Press, 2003) ¿Qué son los estudios de Performance? 2015 Hasta abajo | Radio Ambulante Lisette Arevalo, season 12, episode 22, 2023.iLe: canciones contra el poder | Radio Ambulante Silvia Viñas y Eliezer Budasoff, season 12, episode 26, 2023.Paloma Leiva’s YouTube channel “Quedamos en el limbo”. ¿Quién habla sobre las cuidadoras remuneradas en el 8M? You can find more resources at The Sociological Review
Political Engagement
Doreen Massey was a geographer and public scholar concerned with how political action takes place not only on the level of policy, but also on the level of activism and everyday discourse. Host Agata Lisiak speaks about Massey’s political engagement with Jo Littler, Professor of Social Analysis and Cultural Politics at City, University of London. Jo is part of the editorial collective of Soundings, the journal of politics and culture Massey co-founded in 1995.Jo and Agata meet with James Marriott from Platform, a London-based collective of artists, activists and researchers working on social and environmental justice issues. James tells us about Massey’s involvement with Platform, her “bad behaviour” – her love of challenging the system – and her lasting impact on his thinking and action. We also discuss Jo’s recent publications: The Care Manifesto, written with the Care Collective, and Left Feminisms, a collection of interviews with feminist activists and theorists politically engaged across a variety of issues and locations. We’d love to hear from you: what inspires your political engagement? When do you decide to act and what formats, tools, or tactics do you use? What are the joys and challenges of political collaborations that you’ve encountered? Please fill out this form to share your thoughts with us.Episode Credits Host: Agata LisiakGuests: Jo Littler, James MarriottWriter and Producer: Agata LisiakSenior Editor: Susan Stone Sound Producer: Reece CoxProduction Assistant: Adèle MartinMusic: Studio RArtwork: Bose SarmientoIn partnership with: The Sociological Review FoundationFunded by: Volkswagen FoundationFind more about Spatial Delight at The Sociological Review. Episode ResourcesDoreen Massey’s work quoted or mentioned in this episode:World City (Wiley, 2007)Space, Place, and Gender (Polity Press, 1994)After Neoliberalism? The Kilburn Manifesto, with Stuart Hall and Michael Rustin (Lawrence and Wishart, 2015)When Theory Meets Politics, Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography 40.3 (2008): 492-497.Also mentioned:Left Feminisms: Conversations on the Personal and Political, Jo Littler (Lawrence and Wishart, 2023)The Care Manifesto: The Politics of Interdependence, Care Collective (Verso, 2020)Crude Britannia: How Oil Shaped a Nation, James Marriott and Terry Macalister (Pluto Press, 2021)Platform LondonTake Back the CityThe Doreen Massey we knew, Jo Littler and Jeremy Gilbert, Open Democracy, 2016European Social ForumMassey, D., Hall, S., Rustin, M., et al. 1995. Uncomfortable Times, Soundings 1 (1995): 5-18.
Visual Delight
Some of our listeners – especially the lucky ones who got hold of our postcards – have asked us about the beautiful illustration accompanying Spatial Delight. What exactly does the colourful image depict? How does it connect to Doreen Massey’s work? And, last but not least, who made it? This bonus episode features a conversation between host Adèle Martin and Bose Sarmiento, the artist who designed the illustrations for Spatial Delight. Bose discusses the main themes and symbols in her work, and how they connect to Massey’s work, revealing the process behind her aesthetic choices. Episode Credits Host: Adèle MartinGuest: Bose SarmientoWriter: Adèle MartinProducer: Agata LisiakSenior Editor: Susan Stone Sound Producer: Adèle MartinMusic: Studio RArtwork: Bose SarmientoIn partnership with: The Sociological Review FoundationFunded by: Volkswagen FoundationFind more about Spatial Delight at The Sociological Review. Episode ResourcesDoreen Massey’s work quoted or mentioned in this episode:Mexico City, BBC2 documentary about Mexico 1999Space, Place and Gender (Polity Press, 1994)Further resources:Luna, J., & Galeana, M. 2016. Remembering Coyolxauhqui as a Birthing Text. Regeneración Tlacuilolli: UCLA Raza Studies Journal 2(1): 7-32. Anthropology Museum of Mexico CityScale model of TenochtitlanLa Gran Tenochtitlan, a mural by Diego Rivera, 1945
Geographical Imaginations
Host Agata Lisiak meets with artist and academic Heba Y. Amin at the Zilberman Gallery in Berlin. Professor Amin gives us a tour of her exhibition, When I See the Future, I Close My Eyes, and discusses how colonial and imperialist violence continues to shape our present. Her art demonstrates that technologies – even, or perhaps especially, those that appear to be “objective” – are inherently biased in favour of some populations and actually violent against others. Her art practice involves meticulous research and rigorous, subversive engagement with archives. She uses simulation, appropriation, restaging and humour to contest and disrupt dominant geographical imaginations. We'd love to hear how art inspires you to question geographical imaginations. Is there an art piece that made you reflect on how you imagine the world and your place in it? A performance, photograph or film that has prompted a shift in your perspective? Please take a moment to fill out this form and share your thoughts with us. Episode Credits Host: Agata LisiakGuest: Heba Y. AminWriter and Producer: Agata LisiakSenior Editor: Susan Stone Sound Producer: Reece CoxProduction Assistant: Adèle MartinMusic: Studio RArtwork: Bose SarmientoSpecial thanks to: Zilberman GalleryIn partnership with: The Sociological Review FoundationFunded by: Volkswagen FoundationFind more about Spatial Delight at The Sociological Review. Episode ResourcesDoreen Massey’s work quoted or mentioned in this episode:The Shape of the World (The Open University, 1995)A Place in the World, edited by Doreen Massey and Pat Jess (The Open University, 1995)World City (Wiley, 2007)Heba Y. Amin’s work:Windows on the West, hand-woven Jacquard textile, 2019Marseille’s Pyramid, sculpture and video work, 2019Atom Elegy, miniature model and live photo reconstruction, 2022Operation Sunken Sea, installation, performance, video, 2018The Earth is an Imperfect Ellipsoid, photography, text, projection, 2016 The General’s Stork, mixed media, 2016 - ongoing The General’s Stork (Sternberg Press 2020)As Birds Flying كما تحلق الطيور video, 2016Heba Y. Amin’s websiteZilberman Gallery website Find more about Heba Y. Amin's work at The Sociological Review