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Mobile Utopia

Project Details

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Project Dates: project ended

Project Lead at Lancaster:

Team:

Mobile Utopia brings together communities, entrepreneurs, industry and researchers from a range of different disciplines to explore how â€˜mobilising’ utopia as a method for critical innovation can provide important insights into intergenerational, multi-scalar, human and non-human interconnectivities across transport, traffic and mobilities. The activities include The Mobile Utopia Experiment, where we experiment with particular mobile utopia and ways of undertaking integrative analysis and making.

More information about the .

To join The Mobile Utopia Experiment, please contact p.drinkall@lancaster.ac.uk with the subject header ‘Mobile Utopia Experiment’.

Mobile ±«³Ù´Ç±è¾±²¹Ìýis jointly organised by Cemore, the  (T2M), and the , in association with the .

From Thomas More’s ±«³Ù´Ç±è¾±²¹Ìý(1516) to Ruth Levitas’ Utopia as method (2013) and John Urry’s What is the future? (2016), utopia has been a powerful means to explore how societies have shaped, and have been shaped by, complex im|mobilities, from microbial to big data mobilities, from horse-drawn carriages to driverless cars, from migration to planetary jet streams. Faced with the global uncertainties of the Anthropocene, utopia provides renewed analytical and creative purchase.

It is a research theme for a growing group of people at ¶¶ÒõAPPµ¼º½ and beyond. There are a range of different activities, including (working backwards):

2-5 November 2017 , Centre for Mobilities Research, ¶¶ÒõAPPµ¼º½

1-2 November 2017 The Mobile Utopia Experiment, Centre for Mobilities Research, ¶¶ÒõAPPµ¼º½

29 October – 5 November Mobile Utopia Bonfire School, Centre for Mobilities Research, ¶¶ÒõAPPµ¼º½

The work started with the  project, a short AHRC-funded research co-creation project that sought to develop a deeper understanding of mobile utopias (and dystopias), and to creatively analyse and explore these. Critically, ‘mobile utopias’ are not transport utopias. Communicative, imaginative, embodied and disembodied, utopian and dystopian mobilities of information, people, goods, ideas as well as practices of immobilising, obstructions, borders, stasis, slowness intersect in the making of pasts, presents, futures. Activities include:

, London
24-26 June 2016


2 June 2016, Ellel Village Hall


18th May 2016

Centre for Mobilities Research Showcase


19th April 2016, 11:00 – 16:00, Design Studio, ¶¶ÒõAPPµ¼º½

, 18th April 2016, 09:30-15:00, ¶¶ÒõAPPµ¼º½, Bowland North, SR 07

The project Mobile Utopia 1851-2051 developed through collaboration with different communities in Lancaster and Birmingham. It will take part in celebrations around the 500th Anniversary of the publication of Thomas More’s Utopia. The interdisciplinary group of researchers led by , Professor of Urban Design, includes , , , and .

Critically, the project took ‘mobile utopias’ not as blueprint transport utopias, but started to ‘mobilise’ utopia as method. Communicative, imaginative, embodied and disembodied, utopian and dystopian mobilities of information, people, goods, ideas as well as practices of immobilising, obstructions, borders, stasis, slowness intersect in the making of pasts, presents, futures. 

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