”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters”: Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983)

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”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters”: Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983). / Sedlmaier, Alexander; Anders, Freia.
Cities Contested: Urban Politics, Heritage, and Social Movements in Italy and West German in the 1970s. gol. / Martin Baumeister; Dieter Schott; Bruno Bonomo. Frankfurt : Campus Verlag, 2017.

Allbwn ymchwil: Pennod mewn Llyfr/Adroddiad/Trafodion CynhadleddPennodadolygiad gan gymheiriaid

HarvardHarvard

Sedlmaier, A & Anders, F 2017, ”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters”: Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983). yn M Baumeister, D Schott & B Bonomo (gol.), Cities Contested: Urban Politics, Heritage, and Social Movements in Italy and West German in the 1970s. Campus Verlag, Frankfurt .

APA

Sedlmaier, A., & Anders, F. (2017). ”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters”: Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983). Yn M. Baumeister, D. Schott, & B. Bonomo (Gol.), Cities Contested: Urban Politics, Heritage, and Social Movements in Italy and West German in the 1970s Campus Verlag.

CBE

Sedlmaier A, Anders F. 2017. ”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters”: Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983). Baumeister M, Schott D, Bonomo B, golygyddion. Yn Cities Contested: Urban Politics, Heritage, and Social Movements in Italy and West German in the 1970s. Frankfurt : Campus Verlag.

MLA

Sedlmaier, Alexander a Freia Anders "”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters”: Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983)"., Baumeister, Martin Schott, Dieter Bonomo, Bruno (golygyddion). Cities Contested: Urban Politics, Heritage, and Social Movements in Italy and West German in the 1970s. Frankfurt : Campus Verlag. 2017.

VancouverVancouver

Sedlmaier A, Anders F. ”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters”: Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983). Yn Baumeister M, Schott D, Bonomo B, golygyddion, Cities Contested: Urban Politics, Heritage, and Social Movements in Italy and West German in the 1970s. Frankfurt : Campus Verlag. 2017

Author

Sedlmaier, Alexander ; Anders, Freia. / ”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters” : Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983). Cities Contested: Urban Politics, Heritage, and Social Movements in Italy and West German in the 1970s. Gol. / Martin Baumeister ; Dieter Schott ; Bruno Bonomo. Frankfurt : Campus Verlag, 2017.

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - ”Squatting means to destroy the capitalist plan in the urban quarters”

T2 - Spontis, Autonomists and the struggles over public commodities (1970–1983)

AU - Sedlmaier, Alexander

AU - Anders, Freia

PY - 2017/5/11

Y1 - 2017/5/11

N2 - This paper sketches out how the Spontis – groups of political activists that sought to continue the traditions of the 1968 movement by invoking the spontaneity of the masses – and their successors, the Autonomists, radicalised conflicts over urban space and public transport. As a result, both groups came to challenge the state monopoly on violence, triggering various responses on the part of the authorities. The analysis focuses on protest against public transport fare increases and on a comparison of squatting in Frankfurt (1970s) and West Berlin (early 1980s). It makes clear how perceptions of the Italian Autonomia, which grew into a veritable myth among German radicals, and the more concrete collaborations with Italian migrant activists (Lotta Continua, Unione Inquilini) formed a crucial part of such mobilisations. Finally, a diachronic comparison contrasts the resulting practice and spirit of militant resistance against the restructuring of the public sphere in the early 1980s with the protest campaigns of a decade earlier.

AB - This paper sketches out how the Spontis – groups of political activists that sought to continue the traditions of the 1968 movement by invoking the spontaneity of the masses – and their successors, the Autonomists, radicalised conflicts over urban space and public transport. As a result, both groups came to challenge the state monopoly on violence, triggering various responses on the part of the authorities. The analysis focuses on protest against public transport fare increases and on a comparison of squatting in Frankfurt (1970s) and West Berlin (early 1980s). It makes clear how perceptions of the Italian Autonomia, which grew into a veritable myth among German radicals, and the more concrete collaborations with Italian migrant activists (Lotta Continua, Unione Inquilini) formed a crucial part of such mobilisations. Finally, a diachronic comparison contrasts the resulting practice and spirit of militant resistance against the restructuring of the public sphere in the early 1980s with the protest campaigns of a decade earlier.

KW - Squatters

KW - protest movements

KW - Germany (West) history

KW - Italy history

KW - urban history

KW - resistance

KW - capitalism

KW - public transport

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9783593506975

BT - Cities Contested

A2 - Baumeister, Martin

A2 - Schott, Dieter

A2 - Bonomo, Bruno

PB - Campus Verlag

CY - Frankfurt

ER -