"Rebel Cities" is world renown Geographer David Harvey's case for the modern urban city's importance as a battleground for the future of humanity. Neither a complacent hagiographer of the capitalist city nor a hopeless misanthrope of the James Kunstler variety, Harvey's most recent book on the capitalist city is clearly inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement.
Harvey has spent his entire career studying urban class conflict, urban social movements, and the political economy of built environments. Naturally, a book on this subject at this moment in history should be highly anticipated, coming from this author.
The overall goal of this book, which was constructed out of about four different articles Harvey composed (mainly) for the Socialist Register, is to argue that Marxism should conceive of the city as the stage of class conflict, as opposed to confining itself to merely challenging economic exploitation as it occurs in the workplace. Harvey argues this for several wide, yet compelling reasons. First, Harvey begins with a brief history of the urban world's relationship to modernity. In cities, the worst aspects of capitalism are often solidified into the very construction of the city itself. In Haussman's Paris, the authority of the French military was empowered by the construction of the city's new wide boulevards in the 19th century. In American cities, environmental unsustainability is as much a part of a city's streets as the pavement that covers it. For some critics, this makes cities unredeemable. I had more than one professor at my old college who spoke of the modern city as if it were Gamorrah, one giant mistake that produced nothing good, and never could. Harvey himself makes no excuses for the modern city's cultural fakeness or its negative environmental impact. However, Harvey sees these traits as indicative of inspiring possibilities. The loci of economic and political power that submerge the rest of society in inequality and destructiveness are located in cities- but so are the people most capable of stopping them (the 99%, the proletariat, whatever you want to call them). In the modern city, wide arrays of different people with tremendous creative powers are placed alongside one another. The capitalist class expends an astounding amount of energy in an effort to keep this from working against them, as the protesters in Zuccoti park learned the hard way, and is evident in the neo-liberal era's hostility towards public spaces. In tandem with modern technological possibilities, a widespread social movement undoubtedly could change the nature of the city itself, and combat the social and ecological ills elites impose on urban citizens. In my personal experience, many otherwise liberal types, and especially environmentalists, despair at the modern city's structural defects. As Harvey reminds the reader though, the solutions to seemingly overwhelming social conditions are often intrinsically tied to the conditions themselves, but we can only bring out these possibilities if the masses organize and reject the logic of capitalism.
The second part of the first section, which mainly constitutes chapters 2-3, argues that built environments (the environments that human beings construct) play an essential role in capitalist crisis that is largely ignored by both mainstream economics and even radical political economy. Continuing an argument he first formulated in
The Limits to Capital (New and updated edition)
, Harvey claims that one of the most consistent contradictions of capitalism is the contradiction between the particularities of geography and the interchangeability of value. When economists discuss the trade of space, they speak about forests, neighborhoods, factories, and other spaces as if they're commodities. However, space cannot possibly be a commodity in this sense. Spaces are monopolies. When you cut down a forest, you have eliminated the trees! When you sell real estate, nobody can build a competing neighborhood on top of that one, and so on. Harvey examines recent economic crises across the world, with a particular emphasis on the U.S. and China, and notices that real estate played a critical role in virtually all of them, even crises such as the "Savings and Loan" crisis which isn't usually considered in this fashion. Harvey argues that this is because when capital accumulation becomes frustrated, and as a Marxist he assumes that profit rates inevitably have a downward momentum, that finance attempts to take advantage of the monopoly character of space by continually reselling built environments at ever-higher prices. Eventually though, the system becomes a debt-based pyramid scheme, which results in the ravaging of the entire economy.
The third theme that I was able to identify was the relationship between "commons," "enclosures," and the Marxian concept of value. Here, Harvey makes an elegant case for the idea that the Marxian conception of value should lead Leftists to view urban centers as if they were built solidifications of exploitation. Harvey briefly assesses Lockean, Smithean, and Marxian conceptions of value, and notices that even in Marx's case, the issue of collective value-production is rarely touched on. Harvey argues that the modern city, along with many modern political movements, demonstrate that this is an inexcusable oversight. Capitalists often like to defend the neo-liberal order claiming that it represents the principle that an individual should own what they work for. Harvey claims that they're almost right. It's difficult to disagree with the idea that if someone puts labor into something, then they have some kind of claim to it. The problem Harvey finds though, is that capitalism doesn't operate on this principle. Instead, it operates on the principle that all property and capital needs to be owned by an individual, which is not at all identical to the previously described conception of ethical value. Most of our labor has a collective element to it. We are surrounded by environments, cultural traditions, and practices that are collective in nature. On top of that, much of the private wealth owned by capitalists doesn't correspond to labor that they conducted, but rather the value that they were able to appropriate from the more collectivistic labor that was carried out in the process of production. If we follow this labor "principle" to its logical conclusion, then communities should collectively own the built environment in one way or another, and the wealth that capitalists accumulate does not deserve respect. Harvey identifies this struggle in various fights over commons and enclosures in various situations. When an enclosure obstructs capitalism, such as a nature preserve, or a plot of land owned by a group of peasants, it seeks to turn the enclosed space into a common on the market. However, when a common obstructs the operation of capital, capitalists seek to enclose the common, which happened in rural Europe at the beginning of the modern era, or the elimination of streets as a place of communal activity. Because of this, Harvey criticizes leftists who see the common-ization of everything as an inherent principle. The relationship between socialist value and the enclosure/commons distinction is more complicated than both libertarian-socialists and Marxists give it credit for.
The second section of the book is significant for Harvey's corpus, because as far as I know, it is the first time he has actually laid out a positive model for enacting social change. Harvey assesses two kinds of leftist movements: Movements that are anarchic in disposition, such as social ecology, Zapatistas, and worker's syndicates, and movements that are socialist in disposition, such as state socialism, Trotskyism, and more traditional left-union bodies. Harvey clearly identifies with both to some extent, but ultimately falls into the socialist camp. He strains through both traditions, harshly criticizing the failings of each, and praising their successes as well. He hybridizes both traditions in his own conclusion. He praises the anarchic traditions for promoting self-determination, skepticism of bureaucracy and involvement in empowering disadvantaged groups. However, he berates them for being too sporadic, and too prone to being co-opted by capitalist market forces. He argues that any anti-capitalist movement must be socialist, because capitalism is too powerful for anything less. Then, Harvey lays out a general (but surprisingly specific) vision for a socialist society that hybridizes municipal socialism and democratic state socialism. Municipalities must be highly responsive to the demands of its citizens, and are an ideal unit to promote communitarian lifestyles and human flourishing. At the same time, a state is necessary in order to keep the municipalities from exploiting one another, and to ensure that capitalism can transition into socialism in a geographically even manner.
Harvey finishes on an optimistic note. OWS may have somewhat subsided over the past few months, but we must remember that it didn't come out of nowhere. The 2000s were host to a US immigrant labor strike that nearly shut down both Chicago and LA, the largest anti-war movement in world history, the growing influence of the World Social Forum, the crippling of the WTO through street action, the Arab Spring, South American peasants' movements, the return of class struggle in China, and other mass movements and victories. The OWS itself is only one site of a larger wave of democratic political struggle that is sweeping the world. The last few pages of this section contain one of the most furious and acidic polemics against capitalism I've ever read, which I found to be very entertaining!
This book is an excellent synthesis of urban studies, political economy, and political theory. I suspect that my reading of this book was enriched by my familiarity with Harvey's past works. Harvey assumes that the reader understands the Marxist conception of value, exploitation, the Tendency of the Rate of Profit to Fall, and class. If the reader is not familiar with these terms, or how Harvey uses them in his own writings, then this book may get a little confusing, or appear to rest on many unstated assumptions. However, this is somewhat inevitable when a scholar applies his theories to a specific subject. Harvey has managed to impress yet again. HIGHLY recommended!
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Rebel Cities: From the Right to the City to the Urban Revolution Hardcover – April 4, 2012
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Whose streets? Our streets! In Rebel Cities David Harvey shows us how we might turn this slogan into a reality. That task—and this book—could hardly be more important.”—Benjamin Kunkel, author of Indecision and a founding editor of N+1
“David Harvey provoked a revolution in his field and has inspired a generation of radical intellectuals.”—Naomi Klein
“Forensic and ferocious.”—Owen Hatherley, Guardian
“Harvey’s clarion demand [is] that it is ‘we,’ not the developers, corporate planners, or political elites, who truly build the city, and only we who can seize back our right to its control.”—Jonathan Moses, Open Democracy
“Intellectuals in the Occupy movement [will] appreciate Rebel Cities’ descriptions of the historic and international parallel of urban struggles to reclaim public space and build culture, and be intrigued by Harvey’s musings on how to grow a lively, resilient revolutionary anticapitalist movement.”—Publisher's Weekly
“A consistent intelligent voice of the left.”—Edwin Heathcote, Financial Times
“David Harvey provoked a revolution in his field and has inspired a generation of radical intellectuals.”—Naomi Klein
“Forensic and ferocious.”—Owen Hatherley, Guardian
“Harvey’s clarion demand [is] that it is ‘we,’ not the developers, corporate planners, or political elites, who truly build the city, and only we who can seize back our right to its control.”—Jonathan Moses, Open Democracy
“Intellectuals in the Occupy movement [will] appreciate Rebel Cities’ descriptions of the historic and international parallel of urban struggles to reclaim public space and build culture, and be intrigued by Harvey’s musings on how to grow a lively, resilient revolutionary anticapitalist movement.”—Publisher's Weekly
“A consistent intelligent voice of the left.”—Edwin Heathcote, Financial Times
About the Author
David Harvey teaches at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York and is the author of many books, including Social Justice and the City, The Condition of Postmodernity, The Limits to Capital, A Brief History of Neoliberalism, Spaces of Global Capitalism, and A Companion to Marx’s Capital. His website is <a href="http://davidharvey.org">davidharvey.org</a>
Product details
- Item Weight : 14.6 ounces
- Hardcover : 206 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1844678822
- ISBN-13 : 978-1844678822
- Product Dimensions : 0.58 x 0.09 x 0.86 inches
- Publisher : Verso; 1st Edition (April 4, 2012)
- Language: : English
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Best-sellers rank #1,175,552 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#855 in Radical Political Thought
#1,251 in City Planning & Urban Development
#1,268 in Urban Planning and Development
- Customer Reviews:
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Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2012
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Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2016
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This is a good collection of essays from Harvey -- all are available elsewhere, so if you have read lots of Harvey you won't find anything original.
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2018
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Great and clear work by one of the most important scholars of our time. Harvey makes his unique and timely contribution to the question of what we are really to do to improve our overall political situation.
Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2017
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A Great book. It has set me on a new path.
Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2015
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Got this book for school it was pretty good
Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2013
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Shows that there is hope. Forces that are prevailing in the struggle for equality and justice don't want you to read David Harvey.
Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2013
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This book gets very into economy and socialism. This is fine and it does this in a very intelligent way. I would have liked more in depth conversation on cities that rebuke traditional city structure.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bought used and it came in great condition. Perfect for any urban designer's library
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2017Verified Purchase
Well written and thought provoking. Bought used and it came in great condition. Perfect for any urban designer's library.
Top international reviews
Abjol
3.0 out of 5 stars
Important Insights but lacking in engagement
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 8, 2020Verified Purchase
I love Harvey’s work but this did seem quite arduous to read at some points. There doesn’t seem to be any smooth flow of chapter-to-chapter - perhaps due to its nature as a compendium of articles rather than an original singular thesis. His critique of existing Marxist perspectives on the nature of urban accumulation is satisfying and refreshing, and a powerful manifesto for placing housing at the forefront of contemporary economics. I’d recommend readers of this book tackle it with the knowledge that it cannot be read casually (as I did) with ease, slow comprehension and constant note tacking are an essential for this.
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Roy
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good stuff from an academic leftist
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 1, 2016Verified Purchase
stil relevant and useful information in a neo liberal era.
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samantha
5.0 out of 5 stars
Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 16, 2018Verified Purchase
great book
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M. A. Krul
5.0 out of 5 stars
David Harvey on the 'right to the city'
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 22, 2012Verified Purchase
Within Marxist economics, David Harvey has made himself a specialist in questions of space, place, and geography, and this book is a specific application of that body of thought to the urban. Previously, Harvey had written on the history of Paris as the development of modernity, on spatial differentiation of global capitalism, and similar topics; now, he has turned his eye on the city in the modern day, and the role of urban struggle in the struggle against capitalism more generally. In so doing, he makes a number of very valuable points of analysis. While he is at times, especially in the first chapter, somewhat vague in his summaries of (financial) capitalism generally, he is excellent when it comes to explaining the significance and particulars of the spatial dimension and the way it applies to the city. Harvey's analysis focuses on the city in two ways: first, as site of the generation of rents, and the role that rent plays in the accumulation of capital; and secondly, as a commons, created by the collective physical and symbolic production of its inhabitants.
On the former topic, his chapter on wine-making is particularly excellent, using this perhaps obscure topic to delineate how different kinds of rent are the practical form of accumulation and thereby structure its production from beginning to end. One important aspect here that Harvey rightly, and quite originally, underlines is the necessarily subjective nature of rent: because rent is a category of distribution, it is entirely dependent on the social convention of property, and thereby requires constant efforts to reinforce those symbolic and subjective discourses and ideologies that underpin its existence as property. Not just in the sense of respecting the private ownership of intellectual goods or of land, but also in the ability of companies to appropriate the symbolic value attached to a particular place and social geography, a fictitious value produced by its history and cultural significance. From tourism to advertising, a considerable degree of of capitalist activity concerns itself with such second-order appropriations. This also posits such cultural, symbolic and historical spheres as sites of struggle, where class conflict may arise over such appropriations and the desire of those living in those spaces, or reproducing those symbolic values, to reclaim them as a commons.
The second point, with regard to the city itself as commons, is the mainstay of the book. Here, Harvey outlines the potential of understanding the urban struggles, whether over housing, rent, open spaces, parks, safety, public transport, or whatever, as elementary forms of class struggle. He rightly excoriates those who would withdraw from cities and their struggles into the minimal forms of self-association in remote areas or self-contained communal houses, or who believe that it is sufficient to have self-governing municipalities and localism and decentralization above all else - as he rightly points out, neoliberalism can be decidedly accomodating to localism and decentralization, and smaller is not always better. But he also emphasizes the role of urbanization worldwide in creating a historically uniquely urban working class, a clear locus of potential for vigorous struggle against capitalism, and rightly calls on communist theorists to follow anarchist thinker Murray Bookchin's example in developing adequate ideas for an urban socialist future. At times, Harvey certainly veers too strongly in the direction of claiming originality here - he attacks Marxists for having ignored urban struggles and the newly precarious workforce as being equal participants in the class struggle with factory workers, but this is largely a strawman. Indeed, for most of the history of capitalism, and in most parts of the world, the description of "temporary, itinerant, insecure and precarious" has attached to industrial work as much as anything, and therefore this is nothing new. But the historical move to a worldwide urban working class majority is indeed new, and of great significance for Marxist thought.
For Harvey, then, the 'right to the city' is his proposal for what traditionally would be called a 'transitional demand': a political form of struggle and a way of organizing which is not anticapitalist per se, but will necessarily have to organize against capitalism to succeed, and has the potential to organize a broad array of very diverse groups. This is plausible and important. The question, of course, is as Harvey himself asks: how does one organize a city? Of great significance here, especially in the wake of the fiasco in Wisconsin recently, is his use of American union theorists Fletcher and Gapasin ( Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path Toward Social Justice ) in seeking to broaden the traditional union struggles to comport with the real significance of rent and accumulation through rent in the life experience of the urban population. One major argument of this book is that the significance of rent has been understated by Marxist analysis as a practical and political site of struggle, mainly because as a distributional category it plays a subsidiary role in the pure theory presented in "Capital". This has in many cases led to an unacceptable narrowing of the activities of communist parties and movements as well as of labor unions, restricting their activities to those workers immediately occupied in production of commodities. Instead, as Fletcher & Gapasin rightly write, and Harvey cites: "If class struggle is not restricted to the workplace, then neither should unions be". Connecting such struggles with the wider struggles of unemployed people, of marginal workers of all sorts, of those engaged in domestic work and reproduction, and with the questions of practical life in the city outside the workplace are important ways forward for socialist organization and for a revival of unions; not just in Third World communities like El Alto in Bolivia or the Zapatistas in Chiapas, but at least as much for having a chance to organize urban Westerners against capitalist interests. At times, Harvey's suggestions here move somewhat in the direction of reformist 'municipal socialism', although he is right to point to the real accomplishments of those administrations. But with the Occupy movement in mind, Harvey's throwing down of the gauntlet to find an appropriate, centralizing, and internationalist urban basis for communism is a challenge that our best minds should seek to answer.
On the former topic, his chapter on wine-making is particularly excellent, using this perhaps obscure topic to delineate how different kinds of rent are the practical form of accumulation and thereby structure its production from beginning to end. One important aspect here that Harvey rightly, and quite originally, underlines is the necessarily subjective nature of rent: because rent is a category of distribution, it is entirely dependent on the social convention of property, and thereby requires constant efforts to reinforce those symbolic and subjective discourses and ideologies that underpin its existence as property. Not just in the sense of respecting the private ownership of intellectual goods or of land, but also in the ability of companies to appropriate the symbolic value attached to a particular place and social geography, a fictitious value produced by its history and cultural significance. From tourism to advertising, a considerable degree of of capitalist activity concerns itself with such second-order appropriations. This also posits such cultural, symbolic and historical spheres as sites of struggle, where class conflict may arise over such appropriations and the desire of those living in those spaces, or reproducing those symbolic values, to reclaim them as a commons.
The second point, with regard to the city itself as commons, is the mainstay of the book. Here, Harvey outlines the potential of understanding the urban struggles, whether over housing, rent, open spaces, parks, safety, public transport, or whatever, as elementary forms of class struggle. He rightly excoriates those who would withdraw from cities and their struggles into the minimal forms of self-association in remote areas or self-contained communal houses, or who believe that it is sufficient to have self-governing municipalities and localism and decentralization above all else - as he rightly points out, neoliberalism can be decidedly accomodating to localism and decentralization, and smaller is not always better. But he also emphasizes the role of urbanization worldwide in creating a historically uniquely urban working class, a clear locus of potential for vigorous struggle against capitalism, and rightly calls on communist theorists to follow anarchist thinker Murray Bookchin's example in developing adequate ideas for an urban socialist future. At times, Harvey certainly veers too strongly in the direction of claiming originality here - he attacks Marxists for having ignored urban struggles and the newly precarious workforce as being equal participants in the class struggle with factory workers, but this is largely a strawman. Indeed, for most of the history of capitalism, and in most parts of the world, the description of "temporary, itinerant, insecure and precarious" has attached to industrial work as much as anything, and therefore this is nothing new. But the historical move to a worldwide urban working class majority is indeed new, and of great significance for Marxist thought.
For Harvey, then, the 'right to the city' is his proposal for what traditionally would be called a 'transitional demand': a political form of struggle and a way of organizing which is not anticapitalist per se, but will necessarily have to organize against capitalism to succeed, and has the potential to organize a broad array of very diverse groups. This is plausible and important. The question, of course, is as Harvey himself asks: how does one organize a city? Of great significance here, especially in the wake of the fiasco in Wisconsin recently, is his use of American union theorists Fletcher and Gapasin ( Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path Toward Social Justice ) in seeking to broaden the traditional union struggles to comport with the real significance of rent and accumulation through rent in the life experience of the urban population. One major argument of this book is that the significance of rent has been understated by Marxist analysis as a practical and political site of struggle, mainly because as a distributional category it plays a subsidiary role in the pure theory presented in "Capital". This has in many cases led to an unacceptable narrowing of the activities of communist parties and movements as well as of labor unions, restricting their activities to those workers immediately occupied in production of commodities. Instead, as Fletcher & Gapasin rightly write, and Harvey cites: "If class struggle is not restricted to the workplace, then neither should unions be". Connecting such struggles with the wider struggles of unemployed people, of marginal workers of all sorts, of those engaged in domestic work and reproduction, and with the questions of practical life in the city outside the workplace are important ways forward for socialist organization and for a revival of unions; not just in Third World communities like El Alto in Bolivia or the Zapatistas in Chiapas, but at least as much for having a chance to organize urban Westerners against capitalist interests. At times, Harvey's suggestions here move somewhat in the direction of reformist 'municipal socialism', although he is right to point to the real accomplishments of those administrations. But with the Occupy movement in mind, Harvey's throwing down of the gauntlet to find an appropriate, centralizing, and internationalist urban basis for communism is a challenge that our best minds should seek to answer.
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Dinky
3.0 out of 5 stars
A good editor could make it more exciting
Reviewed in Canada on July 4, 2018Verified Purchase
More rhetoric than substance and rather circular in thought. Took quite a while to get to a few interesting points. A good editor could make it more exciting.
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Richard
5.0 out of 5 stars
Geschenk für Stadtgeografin
Reviewed in Germany on December 18, 2017Verified Purchase
Geburtstagsgeschenk für meine Freundin. Sie beschäftigt sich mit der Entwicklung des öffentlichen Raumes. Ihrer Meinung nach,sollte man "das Kapital" Sofort mitbestellen. Tolles Buch und ein "must read" für jeden, der im öffentlichen Dienst tätig ist.
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sashoub
5.0 out of 5 stars
great
Reviewed in Germany on May 7, 2019Verified Purchase
great
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Birte Gam-jensen
4.0 out of 5 stars
Another Effect of the Crisis?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 7, 2013Verified Purchase
Who has the right to the city? And how did city centers become so fashionable that neither the under or the middle classes can afford to live there. David Harvey blames the increasing inequality as well as the crisis caused mainly by the real estate market. Harvey discusses the way of the economy and furthermore mentions the downturn of Fannie Mae og Freddie Mac - guarantors of almost 80% of all loans in 2008 and the fact that two wars in Iraq did something to the profits made under the president Clinton.
The book also describes how construction companies in Seoul hired teams of sumo wrestlers in order to make them invade and crush entire living areas so that people would abandon the areas and thereby leave them free for selling to rich people.
Also a critic of the formerly famous micro loans in Bangladesh is included. The loans are not so desirable anymore as they fix the women in indebted positions with interests of 18% or more.
The reading is quite demanding but provides an interesting angle to the connection between the economy of a nation and the right to the cities.
The book also describes how construction companies in Seoul hired teams of sumo wrestlers in order to make them invade and crush entire living areas so that people would abandon the areas and thereby leave them free for selling to rich people.
Also a critic of the formerly famous micro loans in Bangladesh is included. The loans are not so desirable anymore as they fix the women in indebted positions with interests of 18% or more.
The reading is quite demanding but provides an interesting angle to the connection between the economy of a nation and the right to the cities.
3 people found this helpful
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Diz
4.0 out of 5 stars
Aux armes, citoyens! Encore...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 30, 2012Verified Purchase
In 'Rebel Cities', David Harvey re-examines and interprets the basis of capitalist accumulation to show its essentially urban roots. This is certainly a wide and sweeping project and it is largely convincing.
He starts with 'The Urban Roots of Capitalist Crises', looking at the bases of the current malaise from a Marxist perspective. Too often, he suggests, Marxist analyses of the crises of capitalism parallel or mirror bourgeois economics, considering exploitation of the proletariat within a national economy. Harvey suggests that:
'[t]he role of the property market in creating the crisis conditions of 2007-09, and its aftermath of unemployment and austerity (much of it administered at the local and municipal level) is not well understood, because there has been no serious attempt to integrate an understanding of processes of urbanization and built-environment formation into the general theory of laws of motion of capital. As a consequence, many Marxists theorists, who love crises to death, tend to treat the recent crash as an obvious manifestation of their favoured version of Marxist crisis.' (P35)
Harvey goes on, therefore, to address this lack and to explore the role of housing and the built environment in the current crisis. Much of this will be familiar to anyone who has taken even a moderate interest in current affairs - the rise of predatory lending, the housing asset bubble, political pressures on state supported institutions such as the US Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, years of low interest rates and the supply of 'cheap' money all leading to the final collapse of the asset bubble. But he extends this account to consider the longer term 'capital accumulation through urbanization' (P42).
By emphasising the geographical specificity of class struggle, Harvey breaks away from the more 'traditional' bases of analysis at national or supra-national level. This makes a lot of sense with the demise of any easily identifiable proletariat (except in, as he points out, parts of China and India). By stressing the struggles within the urban environment, he can view class struggles in, to my mind, much wider and more dynamic terms. Whereas Zizek might talk of 'proletarianisation' in order to weld together 'three fractions of the working class: intellectual labourers, the old manual working class, and the outcasts (unemployed, or living in slums and other interstices of the public space)' ( The Idea of Communism , P226), Harvey takes the public space itself as the basis for the class struggle. Rather than the usual emphasis on the control of wages, by looking at class relations from 'the other side' so to speak, allows Harvey to:
'recognise how easily real wage concessions to workers can be clawed back for the capitalist class as a whole through predatory and exploitative activities in the realm of consumption.' (P57)
Capitalism is, therefore, fundamentally bound up in the forms of urbanisation that we see around us. In order to combat this exploitation, it is fundamentally necessary to do it precisely from within these forms. This will inevitably cut across more 'traditional' views - clearly such an approach cannot simply be based on an industrial proletariat but must include cultural workers, immigrant workers, it must cross gender lines and even include those dismissively labelled the 'lumpenproletariat'.
In Chapter 4, Harvey examines 'The Art of Rent' or the ways in which capitalism attempts to take over, amongst other things, the common spaces and cultural production in the process of commodification. Sounding at times reminiscent of Thomas Frank , he still sees the city and the urban environment as the place where opposition to this commodification may most easy and effectively be mounted.
After this thorough grounding in theory, Harvey looks, in Section 2, at 'Rebel Cities' (P113). From the Paris Communes to the role of Barcelona in the Spanish Civil War to the Prague Spring and the recent rebellions and revolts in Cochabamba, Tahrir Square and El Alto, the urban environment is where active resistance to the counter-revolutionary neoliberal forces happens.
To put it another way, you do not step out of the class struggle when you leave work - it is all around you, in the (urban) environment and the relations that this implies - and so to ex- or abstract these movements from consideration within a greater class struggle is not only to ignore powerful and progressive forces but is also to irretrievably weaken analysis of the situation. If you don't realise this, the capitalists certainly do:
'It is in fact in the cities that the wealthy classes are most vulnerable, not necessarily as persons but in terms of the value of the assets they control. It is for this reason that the capitalist state is gearing up for militarized urban struggles as the front line of class struggle in years to come.' (P131)
This review is by no means comprehensive. At times, this book is hard work, but it is really worth the effort. It fits in well and extends David Harvey's previous analyses, but it does more than that. Apart from a sound theoretical underpinning, it also explores and suggests alternative means of social organisation, looking to the work of, amongst others, Murray Bookchin . And in 'The Party of Wall Street Meets Its Nemesis' the book ends with a rousing and powerful call to action.
He starts with 'The Urban Roots of Capitalist Crises', looking at the bases of the current malaise from a Marxist perspective. Too often, he suggests, Marxist analyses of the crises of capitalism parallel or mirror bourgeois economics, considering exploitation of the proletariat within a national economy. Harvey suggests that:
'[t]he role of the property market in creating the crisis conditions of 2007-09, and its aftermath of unemployment and austerity (much of it administered at the local and municipal level) is not well understood, because there has been no serious attempt to integrate an understanding of processes of urbanization and built-environment formation into the general theory of laws of motion of capital. As a consequence, many Marxists theorists, who love crises to death, tend to treat the recent crash as an obvious manifestation of their favoured version of Marxist crisis.' (P35)
Harvey goes on, therefore, to address this lack and to explore the role of housing and the built environment in the current crisis. Much of this will be familiar to anyone who has taken even a moderate interest in current affairs - the rise of predatory lending, the housing asset bubble, political pressures on state supported institutions such as the US Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, years of low interest rates and the supply of 'cheap' money all leading to the final collapse of the asset bubble. But he extends this account to consider the longer term 'capital accumulation through urbanization' (P42).
By emphasising the geographical specificity of class struggle, Harvey breaks away from the more 'traditional' bases of analysis at national or supra-national level. This makes a lot of sense with the demise of any easily identifiable proletariat (except in, as he points out, parts of China and India). By stressing the struggles within the urban environment, he can view class struggles in, to my mind, much wider and more dynamic terms. Whereas Zizek might talk of 'proletarianisation' in order to weld together 'three fractions of the working class: intellectual labourers, the old manual working class, and the outcasts (unemployed, or living in slums and other interstices of the public space)' ( The Idea of Communism , P226), Harvey takes the public space itself as the basis for the class struggle. Rather than the usual emphasis on the control of wages, by looking at class relations from 'the other side' so to speak, allows Harvey to:
'recognise how easily real wage concessions to workers can be clawed back for the capitalist class as a whole through predatory and exploitative activities in the realm of consumption.' (P57)
Capitalism is, therefore, fundamentally bound up in the forms of urbanisation that we see around us. In order to combat this exploitation, it is fundamentally necessary to do it precisely from within these forms. This will inevitably cut across more 'traditional' views - clearly such an approach cannot simply be based on an industrial proletariat but must include cultural workers, immigrant workers, it must cross gender lines and even include those dismissively labelled the 'lumpenproletariat'.
In Chapter 4, Harvey examines 'The Art of Rent' or the ways in which capitalism attempts to take over, amongst other things, the common spaces and cultural production in the process of commodification. Sounding at times reminiscent of Thomas Frank , he still sees the city and the urban environment as the place where opposition to this commodification may most easy and effectively be mounted.
After this thorough grounding in theory, Harvey looks, in Section 2, at 'Rebel Cities' (P113). From the Paris Communes to the role of Barcelona in the Spanish Civil War to the Prague Spring and the recent rebellions and revolts in Cochabamba, Tahrir Square and El Alto, the urban environment is where active resistance to the counter-revolutionary neoliberal forces happens.
To put it another way, you do not step out of the class struggle when you leave work - it is all around you, in the (urban) environment and the relations that this implies - and so to ex- or abstract these movements from consideration within a greater class struggle is not only to ignore powerful and progressive forces but is also to irretrievably weaken analysis of the situation. If you don't realise this, the capitalists certainly do:
'It is in fact in the cities that the wealthy classes are most vulnerable, not necessarily as persons but in terms of the value of the assets they control. It is for this reason that the capitalist state is gearing up for militarized urban struggles as the front line of class struggle in years to come.' (P131)
This review is by no means comprehensive. At times, this book is hard work, but it is really worth the effort. It fits in well and extends David Harvey's previous analyses, but it does more than that. Apart from a sound theoretical underpinning, it also explores and suggests alternative means of social organisation, looking to the work of, amongst others, Murray Bookchin . And in 'The Party of Wall Street Meets Its Nemesis' the book ends with a rousing and powerful call to action.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 18, 2015Verified Purchase
The book was in great condition could'nt have expected anymore.
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mummyof3
5.0 out of 5 stars
Present for a student
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 1, 2013Verified Purchase
Bought for my son in the first year of his Geography degree at Cambridge and he has found it useful for essays.
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Rodrigo Rivera
3.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent content, very bad (physical) book.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 10, 2013Verified Purchase
The book arrived in a relatively short time, and I started reading it right away. David Harvey doesn't hide anything: his radical views on how capitalism uses the urban areas are very interesting and the link with a more pro-active, revolutionary kind of analysis, towards urban activism, should be in my opinion, one of the main directions that social movements should discuss.
Unfortunately, after 30 pages or so, these first pages started to unglue from the cover. For a new book, it's not at all what I expected. Fortunately, someone offered me the same book but with a hardcover some days later. Fortunate coincidence.
Next time, use some of the profits to buy good glue, dear editors.
Unfortunately, after 30 pages or so, these first pages started to unglue from the cover. For a new book, it's not at all what I expected. Fortunately, someone offered me the same book but with a hardcover some days later. Fortunate coincidence.
Next time, use some of the profits to buy good glue, dear editors.
2 people found this helpful
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Chantelle
1.0 out of 5 stars
Deceptive
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 14, 2014Verified Purchase
We picked this up for our first book club meeting, drawn in by the blurb and title... Mistake!
It's a whole lot of figures and boring facts. I don't even believe the author enjoyed writing about it. 2 people out of 15 finished it (and even they struggled) The london Riots have about a paragraph in the whole book and its more a figure book than anything. One of the worst books I've read unfortunately
It's a whole lot of figures and boring facts. I don't even believe the author enjoyed writing about it. 2 people out of 15 finished it (and even they struggled) The london Riots have about a paragraph in the whole book and its more a figure book than anything. One of the worst books I've read unfortunately
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