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Aesthetic, essayistic, literary, journalistic, political-scientific, political-theoretical, as well as philosophical interventions in German or English can be sent to redaktion@engagee.org until December 1, 2017. Contributions are limited to 10,000 characters, and image material is welcome.
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In the email subject, please insert the name of the sub-section under which you are submitting your intervention.
We can publish audio- and videofiles on our homepage/our blog.
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Guideline for contributions
engageé is an independent sociopolitical magazine, located at the intersection of philosophy, politics, literature, art and activism.
engagée is fond of theory but equally adores practice.
engageé gathers contributions that negotiate emancipatory perspectives.
What we don't want:
Contributions that are oriented exclusively towards an orthodox academic style and contributions which, although they deal with an analysis and criticism of social relations, do not deal with emancipatory perspectives.
What we want:
philosophical essays, journalistic (in the style mainly feuilletonist) formats, literary plays, poetry, personal reflections and insights into activist practice; politically promising projects, experimental and collective contributions in writing and images, glosses, commentaries, all forms of artistic works, and most important to us: contributions that bind philosophical discussions to a concrete subject and make them fruitful for practice.
Please take into account our citation guidelines here and the infos regarding our open editorial board here.
Call for Contributions é-Blog:
Contributions, drafts, and pitches for our online-Blog that correspond to our editorial concept are always welcome. Feel free to reach out at redaktion@engagee.org.
Call for action
engagée #6/7
“Radical Cities”
Cities are a place of repression, poverty and exploitation. Within the neoliberal order, cities labelled as smart are often laboratories of policing and control, racial profiling and state violence. And yet, cities are also a prefigurative space for political struggles and emancipatory practices. From the anarchist tradition to the social movements of the 20th century, the urban may be seen as a field for interventions because of its interconnected nature and the possibilities of building autonomous networks. It is therefore not a surprise that today citizens, activists and politicians are reformulating an interest in urban and local governing. Throughout Europe and beyond, we observe new forms of government at the municipal and city level, which are experimenting with democratic practices. These initiatives tackle corporate power and increase access to common goods like water, energy, housing and healthcare, as well as oppose privatisations, cuts in public services and the closure of borders.
By combining the ideas of Radical Democracy and Rebel Cities, the issue #6/7 of engagée aims to introduce and elaborate the concept of “Radical Cities”. Bearing in mind this twofold angle, the next edition will be a double issue to be published in May 2018. Thinking about the future of both urbanism and democracy, we ask:
What is rebel about Radical Democracy? What is radical about Rebel Cities? Can we envision a Rebel Democracy for Radical Cities?
Different political initiatives by neo-municipalist movements and civic platforms use the term radical democracy to frame their activities or as a title for a workshop. But what does it mean to be radical today? What are the different notions of radicalisation? What is radical philosophy and what can be understood of the tradition of democratic radicalism?
The program of the radical theory of democracy can be briefly summarized as follows: alternatives are possible and are necessary. This does not, however, tell us much about the practical effect of this theoretical tradition. Although the call for a new democratic horizon is ubiquitous, what is offered by certain existing radical theories of democracy seems rather timid. It is unclear if these radical theories of democracy are anchored in people’s everyday practices and experiences, which we contend is necessary in order to provide adequate answers to the limits of the capitalist and neoliberal order, austerity politics, the upsurge of nationalist government and right-wing movements. How can a radical theory of democracy acquire political relevance under the present social conditions?
If we do not want to derive radical democratic ideas merely from abstract thinking, we should evaluate them through the experiences of marginalised groups. If we agree that the radical theory of democracy cannot be left to a philosophical reflection, but must become practical – and spatial – in an experimental sense, how can we examine radical democracy as a critical and urban experimental activity? To what extent can the neo-municipalist movements and civic platforms such as Ahora Madrid, Barcelona en Comù, the city of Naples, Fearless Cities and European Alternatives or Plan C in the UK (just to name a few) be interpreted as a sign of the practical orientation of this theoretical tradition? Do the current municipal movements serve as examples of an innovative and experimental spirit of democratic innovation, of the possibility of new radical democratic beginnings? What would a Europe of cities look like? Or do we have to provincialize Europe because Radical Cities are rather a concept that fits better – or in different and specific ways - the fast growing (mega-)cities in Asia, Latin America and Africa?
In engagée #6/7 “Radical Cities” four axes will be explored: cities as a space for community building, cities as a place for refuge, cities as a place for radical experimental forms of democracy from below and cities as a process for re-thinking institutions.
Cities as a space for community building
Cities as a place for refuge
Cities as a place for radical experimental forms of democracy from below
Cities as a process for re-thinking institutions