How have movements for LGBTQ+ rights and equality connected with the governance of cities? How do these populations, and the venues and neighbourhoods they identify with, feature in urban planning and development? Why do mayors march in Pride parades?
In this talk, Ben Campkin, Professor of the History and Theory of Architecture and Urbanism, will explore these questions, looking at the case of London through the scholarship on gay movements, urban change and ‘queer space’ that has developed internationally across numerous disciplines over the past 60 years.
Ben will use case studies, such as the Greater London Council-funded London Lesbian and Gay Centre of the 1980s, and local and central London Pride parades in the present, to show how these produce an adaptive ‘queer infrastructure’ that shifts according to the changing frontiers in the politics of gender and sexuality, generational priorities, and the socio-economic drivers for diversity in institutions.
The Coronavirus pandemic has intensified threats to the survival of cultural venues, especially independent ones and night-time scenes. With this in mind, the lecture will highlight how radical queer spaces, and the practices of urbanism and culture they foster, facilitate utopian imagination, helping to confront local and global challenges, and creating affirmative places for exchange across political and social divides.
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