The Commonist Horizon: Futures Beyond Capitalist Urbanization
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About this ebook
- People interested in the commons/commoning broadly and especially those who hope to make Eastern Europe part of the broader conversation on commoning.
- There have been a number of books on the commons, but none that look at commoning in a post-Soviet context.
- Written by authors speaking from within social movements, examining their own praxis and producing knowledge from within the processes of struggle
- The book emerges from and retains the tone of an active process of dialogue within and between social movements in post-state socialist Europe, insisting on not being confined to a region.
- The book speaks to the social sciences but is particularly oriented toward militants interested in commoning, the right to the city, and urban justice struggles with an eye on long-term transformation.
- Reaches out to people who are looking for new orientations due to their experiences in the latest crises but who may not feel a strong sense of belonging to the Left and its languages.
- The book will be promoted in a series of online/in person dynamic dialogues and public discussions with authors as well as the movements/organizations they are connected with. These events, a website where these and related events will be promoted, will be funded by the Lithuanian Arts Council.
- Featured on publishing platforms/journal/magazines which the authors take part in, such as Mute, LeftEast, and the Radical Housing Journal.
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The Commonist Horizon - Common Notions
Preface
Stavros Stavrides
As global capitalism is becoming more and more threatening to the survival of humanity and the entire planet, the need to reconsider strategies and tactics for social emancipation and collective power becomes even more urgent. This is not an issue in which contemplation and abstract planning are adequate responses. Around the world, collectives and movements are producing valuable commoning experiences, practicing the risks and potentialities included in showing that a different future is possible. Initiatives of solidarity have flourished during the recent pandemic crisis and gesture towards radically new ways of social organization based on mutual care and equality. Networks of mutual care have united efforts even in the most difficult period of lockdowns, and sharing economies have acquired a renewed momentum, as the CareNotes Collective details in their contribution to this volume.
Do these scattered efforts, often not in touch with one another, show that the longing for a different society is buried under the exigencies of survival? Can we learn important lessons from the ways solidarity is re-invented as a necessity within organized practices of collective survival—especially by urban poor, marginalized, and dispossessed people? Is it possible to answer the questions of strategy without taking into consideration the survival inventiveness of the most exploited among us, and their efforts to establish alternative practices of cultural production that give shape to aspirations of emancipation?
In the context of such questions, the city and problems related to reclaiming the collective power to create the city become crucial. Urban populations produce knowledges, sensibilities, as well as struggles that show that a different urban future is possible. In so many places across the planet urban extractivism,
which explicitly or implicitly appropriates urban goods and services in order to convert them into real estate ventures and profit-making opportunities, needs to be confronted by local as well as interconnected global struggles.
Enclosure is the term that literally as well as metaphorically represents dominant practices of predatory dispossession. Commoning encompasses the practices that move in the opposite direction of what several authors in this edited collection refer to as capital’s spatial fix, to reclaim what should be shared as common as well as to produce more areas of sharing. In observing struggles and initiatives that follow this path, can we discern answers to the question of collective power? Sharing power and responsibilities, participatory habits based on the rotation of duties, implementing rules based on agreements that do not suppress differences, the production of knowledge based on ideas of complementarity and synergy rather than on dogmatic approaches to eternal truths: this is the legacy of such collective experiences. Isn’t this, at the same time, a genuine production of theory and politics?
This is how the questions about social organization can be reconsidered, the editors of The Commonist Horizon instruct us, in their collection of geographically and historically disparate commons. Distinct historical circumstances raise different issues of power distribution. The crafting of the state in neoliberal capitalism conditions is essentially a recasting of centralized power into a model that supports and serves the most powerful actors of a globalized market. In Eastern Europe and elsewhere, was state socialism a true alternative to this present we have to live in? Or is it that the most promising experiments of both the past and the future share a common effort to establish horizontality, mutual support, and equality? What can we learn from the different real-existing forms of social organization that, no matter what word used—true democracy, self-management, socialism, or anarchism—express social emancipation as a process that can only flourish in societies which consider their members as equal?
Let us hear what the contributors of this volume have to say as they chart out the commonist horizon. Their engagement in struggles for commons, and their commoning aspirations, promise a rich offering of possibilities concerning the power that commoning has to support efforts for a just society. But let us not forget, we will make the path towards this society as we walk it.
Athens, Greece
September 2022
Introduction
Noah Brehmer and Mary N. Taylor
As a microdistrict bordering the commercial core of the post-Soviet city Vilnius enters the first stages of municipality-led gentrification process, a leftist movement space—Luna6—is confronted with an urgent question: how do we move from defensive tactics that respond to the latest stages of gentrification, to transformative strategic revolts that attack its root causes and put into practice alternative forms of urban life? Today the commons
rolls off many tongues as an answer to this question. The commons, or commoning, in the tradition from which we write, is a revolutionary proposal for the communal organization and control of the manifold realities that make up our daily reproduction. From cooperative housing to district kitchens, autonomous health clinics and community gardens, then scaling up to solidarity economies, we approach commoning as a horizon for reimagining and transforming social life against and beyond capitalist urbanization and accumulation.
While the commons and commoning have deep global historical roots, the approach to commoning we locate ourselves within is temporally aligned with the Midnight Notes Collective’s analysis of capital’s new enclosures
in the 1990s. Pointing to the fall of the USSR, the free marketization of China, the effects of debt austerity imposed on African countries by the IMF and World Bank, and other examples of the mutual contraction of the ‘right to subsist,’
the collective finds a new phase of capital accumulation.¹ What Marx called original accumulation—the violent displacement of peoples from the means of their subsistence—is not a singular event at the dawn of capitalism,
but rather, a regular return to the path of accumulation and a structural component of class struggle.
² Identifying several features of the restructuring of accumulation on a global scale since the 1970s, the goal of which was to uproot workers from the terrain on which their organizational power is built,
Midnight Notes argued that every struggle against enclosure and for the commons becomes a call of jubilee.
Their project reinvigorated the language of the commons and produced a long and ongoing study of practices and relations of commoning.³
Combating the new enclosures that have been advancing a planetary assault on our day-to-day existence, commoning has become a way to describe and inspire new forms of global rebellions against capital. Connecting the urban and rural, the waged and unwaged, commoning movements arise in many forms, in response to the dismantling of the social infrastructures of welfare and socialist states and the expropriation of peoples from their land and homes through privatization, enclosure, debt, and predatory financialization processes. Although at times catalyzed as a response to these global movements of enclosure, commoning is more than an appeal to the state as the guardian of the public good. The commons/ commoning affirms the direct control of institutions and resources by the communities that produce and depend on them.
Much thinking about commoning has been inspired by Latin American movements—for example, the Zapatistas in Mexico (who famously rose up against NAFTA, fashioned our critiques of neoliberalism, and self-govern an autonomous territory in Chiapas today), and the protagonists of the Water War in Cochabamba, Bolivia, la Coordinadora de Defensa del Agua y de la Vida, who successfully fought against a multinational corporation’s privatization of both public waterworks and self-built water supply systems. There are also long traditions in Eastern Europe—for example, the everyday communism
of the cooperativist movement in early twentieth-century Poland—that have been taken up by some contemporary theorists as a prefiguration of today’s politics of the common.
Many non-state-centric socialisms, anarchisms, and manners of commoning are part of the history of the region.⁴ Histories of Czechoslovakian councilism, the communal subsistence economies across the Soviet Union, and experiments with self-management in Yugoslavia have much to contribute to contemporary commoning movements. By centering cities in Eastern Europe in three chapters in this book, we contribute to knowledge about traditions in this region that led to state socialist experiments, critiqued them, or fell outside their purview.
As the state socialism that came to dominate Eastern Europe (albeit with some variety) crumbled in crises of debt and legitimacy, experiments with market socialism gave way to full-on shock therapy induced neoliberalism. Activists in the region have taken up practices of commoning and ideas of the commons to criticize and counter the vicious wave of enclosures that became apparent after the fall of state socialism, without seeking a return to its heavily stigmatized politics and policies. The commons have also been embraced within some of these same movement formations to think about the many practices and struggles that appeared under and within existing state socialism, beyond facile framings of planned economies and the centralized state. Far from a desert,
the postsocialist terrain is rich with experiment, inspired by excavations of the past and enhanced by international and transversal connections in the present.⁵
With Midnight Notes, we see the horizon of commons/commoning as revolutionary possibility. While in our title we riff on Jodi Dean’s Communist Horizon, we understand the horizon on different terms than Dean, who imagines it as a dimension of experience
that we may lose sight of
but can never lose.
⁶ Our horizon is always in the making, standing at a remove from the centripetal certainty of the vanguard party’s orientation. Commonist futurity begins from the priorities of immediate reproduction—life is not subordinated to a sacrificial politics which can only promise the good life as an idea, a longing, an outcome—the denunciation of living for life.⁷ The commons is neither a retreat to the parochial or premodern, nor a mere opposition of the concrete and the abstract with the general and the particular. We start in the muck of our daily existence; the horizon emerges from our desire as we move through these conditions. Thinking with Félix Guattari and Gilles Deleuze, we can say that our horizon comes to view as a manifestation and enunciation of a collective desire.
From the concrete here and now, rooted in the practices of local institutions, we walk
like the Zapatistas, asking questions.
As we near the horizon constituted by such desire, a new horizon appears. This book, then, is an artifact and tool of a conversation, as well as a collective enunciation of a commonist horizon. Weaving urban locations, activities, and positions with those whom we recognize and hold dear, it opens itself to a transversal becoming on different scales. Insofar as this book constitutes a collective enunciation of a commonist horizon, that horizon is complex and multivocal: always rooted in a locale, suggesting, in the place of a teleology, a set of practices and critiques that can be linked together through noncapitalist and anticapitalist commoning formations.
If commoning is emphatically not Communism (as any form of existing state socialism) its relationship with many historical and contemporary communisms is worth exploring. Peter Linebaugh writes:
In the 1840s, then, ‘communism’ was the new name to express the revolutionary aspirations of proletarians. It pointed to the future.… [I] n contrast, the ‘commons’ belonged to the past, perhaps to the feudal era, when it was the last-ditch defense against extinction. Now in the twenty-first century the semantics of the two terms seem to be reversed, with communism belonging to the past of Stalinism, industrialization of agriculture, and militarism, while the commons belongs to an international debate about the planetary future of land, water, and subsistence for all. What is sorely needed in this debate so far is allegiance to the actual movement of the common people who have been enclosed and foreclosed but are beginning to disclose an alternative, open future.⁸
While provoking the question of a common ism,
this book’s collective enunciation brings together a set of situated actor-thinkers to consider the commons as an idea, a practice, and strategy. Why then focus on capitalist urbanization? First, capital accumulation is closely tied to urbanization, to transformation of the built and natural environment in manners that are tied to tricks of finance and hasten the frequency of the crises we are experiencing. Second, more than half of the world’s population lives in cities—we do too. As Linebaugh stresses, Marx and Engels focus on the political standpoint of landless urban commoners (proletarians), contributing to unfortunate distinctions, from today’s lens, among the proletarian, lumpenproletarian, and peasantry.⁹ Urban-rural migration brings the knowledges of people in the countryside to cities, while financial capital finds ways to accumulate (and defer crisis to the future) via the transformation of space, whether in land grabs in the countryside or development
in the cities.
We consider urban commoning here because we begin our analysis with our own lives, in cities. But cities are not independent of the countryside. Rather, they are dependent in so many ways. Not only have urban labor struggles so often been supported by neighborhood and community organizations, but workers who produce the city range from those who provide food, to urban consumers, to those who mine the steel that girds the buildings.¹⁰ Unlike so many images of the worker as the champion of history, the commons blurs the boundary between production and social reproduction.
¹¹ The urbanization of capital, so central to our moment, means that the capitalist class not only dominates the state but also the urban process itself, which affects rural regions too. In this context, the movements of the squares, right to the city movements, and urban uprisings can all be seen as struggles to appropriate urban space for common purposes.¹²
Other movements have taught us that the territory is a place of social reproduction of our communities and their resistances, insurrections, and insurgencies.¹³ The commons can ask us, then, to consider our cities, neighborhoods, and districts as territory and ourselves as part of a social body sustained by and sustaining this territory. But while territories may be conceived as commons, many commons are not (yet) territories. Commoning on a smaller scale, whether by teaching and learning skills and practices together, taking care of our collective, by tending to a community garden, or by caring for a shared project, is a starting point, even if we wish to expand to territories, solidarity economies, or confederations. Commons
to us means commoning. Beyond a resource and its defense is also a social relation.
The Chapters, or en avant pour le dérive!
Emerging from a process initiated by the Naujininkai Commons Collective at Luna6 in Vilnius, this book carries the transversal connections shaped across multi-scale, multimodal movements and everyday formations.¹⁴ The present volume is composed of five interventions by movement thinkers who were invited to take part in this project because they are already working together with the editors across multiple fields and actions. While this volume is restricted and enabled by the material conditions of the written page, we invite you to take a less determined journey through these urban landscapes of commons and their other(s) as a dérive. Moving through stylistic shifts and different positions, perhaps you will find some common ground and a commonist horizon.
Our dialogical process stretches to authors in capital cities of two other former state socialist republics: Budapest, Hungary and Belgrade, Serbia. From there we go to London, England and then, to a translocally constituted collective writing from New York City in Lenapehoking. Collectively, authors take up the lived experience of building what might be called urban commons,
offering insights on the conceptual and political potentials and limitations of this terminology and associated practices.
We begin with Ana Vilenica’s Who Has The Right to Common
? Decolonizing Commoning in East Europe. Writing from Serbia, Vilenica challenges the dominance of Western epistemologies to address how the neocolonial discourse of transition from state socialism to neoliberalism conveniently erased vital leftist histories of commoning/commons in former socialist East Europe. Vilenica argues that the category of social property
and the self-managed
housing experiments in socialist Yugoslavia should be seen as commons, even if they are imperfect and contradictory forms. She goes on to identify how the neocolonial transition discourse erases these empowering legacies while enforcing divisive racialized attitudes in today’s housing movement that have resulted in the failure to grasp critical opportunities for commoning. In Chapter 2, Anthony Iles’ From the Neoliberal City to Disaster Capitalism, from Commons to Unenclosure
explores the changing relation between urban development and the cultural field, bringing us along in a search for agency in the suffocating climate of contemporary London. Setting this relation within the history of new enclosures
and the emergence of a commons discourse in the British New Left, Iles addresses how practices of so-called commoning have been used as dressing
for real estate developers. Analyzing the critical shortcomings of these popular commoning formations, he makes an appeal for the commons as an antagonistic practice of unenclosure. The contribution includes a glossary of concepts on commons, which points to core concepts circulating throughout the book. In Chapter 3, A Movement to Transform Everything: Knowledge Production Towards Solidarity Economy in Hungary, Mary N. Taylor engages Zsuzsanna Pósfai (cofounder, Periféria Center) and Ágnes Gagyi (cofounder, Solidarity Economy Center) in a conversation on the processes of knowledge production and the political and economic conditions that led to their work developing cooperative rental housing in Budapest’s postsocialist and financialized housing landscape. In Chapter 4, Reclaiming Care in the Urban Commons, the CareNotes Collective—writing from New York City—meditates on urban commons as transversally constituted processes of care work and social reproduction. Taking care as a central practice