Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 150
Trim: 4½ x 6¼
978-1-78661-602-9 • Hardback • May 2022 • $116.00 • (£89.00)
978-1-5381-6430-3 • Paperback • May 2022 • $42.00 • (£35.00)
978-1-78661-603-6 • eBook • May 2022 • $39.50 • (£30.00)
Alberto is a sociologist who does research at the intersection between digital media and activism,
qualitative and digital methods, collaborative and digital economies. He is Assistant Professor in
Media & Communication within the School of Media, Communication and Sociology, University of
Leicester.
INTRODUCTION: From Reaction to Autonomy: Protesting, Resisting and Creating Institutions
1. Framing Art & Political Mobilisation
2. Revealing the Backstage of an Ethnographic Study of Artists
3. Art’s Own Activism
4. Organising for Being an Institution
5. Producing Culture in the Neoliberal City
CONCLUSION: Doing the unthinkable: Becoming Institutions
In his breakthrough study of autonomous cultural institutions, Alberto Cossu tells us that artists are operating at the frontlines of transformative political mobilization, and yet with his uniquely engaged approach to urban research it is Cossu himself who joins the frontline as a new type of socially active ethnographer. Cossu’s investigation into contemporary forms of bottom-up community organizing will prove to be a requisite reference for transformative artists, scholars, theorists and activists in the foreseeable future.
— Gregory Sholette, author of Dark Matter, Delirium and Resistance, and the Art of Activism and the Activism of Art
At the level of theory the autonomy of art is presented as a problem to be debated and perhaps overcome. But in the lived reality of artists today, during an age of precarity where anything ‘creative’ is weaponized as part of arts-based gentrification, achieving autonomy for art in a different way is something to be wished for and struggled over. What could an autonomous art institution look like today? Here Alberto Cossu explores the struggles, dreams, lives, and campaigns of those who are struggling to answer that question.
— Stevphen Shukaitis, co-director University of Essex Centre for Commons Organising, Values Equalities and Resilience
Building on the experience of the art center Macao in Milan, and weaving together contemporary debates on art, social movements, class and the creative city, this book makes an excellent contribution not only to the sociology of art, but to contemporary social and political thought in general. Readers will find it full of novel ideas and inspiration!
— Adam Arvidsson, professor of sociology, University of Naples, Federico II
In a moment of perpetual capitalist crisis, artists around the world are mobilizing both for their own benefit and to change society. Alberto Cossu’s intimate ethnography of Milan’s radical squatted Macau cultural centre offers us a vital case study of this trend, and shows us the potentials and the pitfalls as artists form new, horizontal institutions. It will be of great benefit not only to scholars following the changing politics and economics of culture, but also to a new generation of artist-activists looking for inspiration and lessons on how to create shared commons for the radical imagination.
— Max Haiven, Canada Research Chair in the Radical Imagination, co-director, ReImagining Value Action Lab