Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5118429 | Political Geography | 2017 | 10 Pages |
â¢We focus on “relational places,”urban sociability and everyday life in understanding contentious politics.â¢We analyze the role of Istanbul's BeÅiktaÅ neighborhood and football fan group named çArÅı in 2013 Gezi Park protests.â¢çArÅı's “place framing” of BeÅiktaÅ, game day rhythms and rituals transform the group to political subjects during Gezi.â¢We expose the contingent and fragile links between urban space and politics.
Following the literature on spatiality of contentious politics and inspired by Lefebvre's concept of everyday life, we argue that the study of Istanbul's BeÅiktaÅ neighborhood as a “relational place” can help us contextualize the Gezi Park resistance that took place in the city in 2013. Though the neighborhood is very open to homogenizing pressures of neoliberal transformation, it still has lingering diverse and vibrant networks. This has partly been possible through the football fan group çArÅı, which combines a wide series of community activism with neighborhood-based rhythms and rituals, generating a new urban sociability. This “place-framing” role that çArÅı played in BeÅiktaÅ, also allowed this fan group to combine its neighborhood power with the ongoing political mobilization during the Gezi resistance. The case of çArÅı demonstrates how a simultaneous look at everyday life and place-based networks can help us explore the processes of contentious politics and analyze contingent ties between space, rhythms, and politics.