|
Re: the Act of leisure: msg#00044culture.india.sarai.reader
Dear Iram et al, Between my 7th and 14th I've lived in a small town in the south of The Netherlands. In front of our house was a playfield the size of a soccer field where many children would come to play, and occasionally their parents would join too. There were many such spaces in the town, maintained by the city council. Control on the space was done through the parents that lived around the space who would occasionally watch what was going on from their houses. If things they deemed unsuitable were happening, they would either go out to intervene, or phone other parents that their kid was misbehaving. As I grew older and wondered more through the town, I soon discovered that this control network stretched out not only to the playground in front of our house, but through the entire town. For example, when I would secretly smoke a cigarette in a place far from my home,, my mom would know about it before I got home. It was a strict surveillance network with spies and agents everywhere in the form of parents, neighbours and kids betraying other kids, intelligence reports arriving in the form of fresh gossip. For the last couple of years I've been living in Amsterdam, which like my town has many public spaces. They don't come in the form of huge playgrounds, but there are many public benches, parks and other places one can go and sit down. Especially along the canals, streets seem more than just a space that people are allowed to travel through. There are no issues of private security guards or police officers telling people to move along that I know of, which is quite different from what I read is happening in Delhi and other Indian cities. The big parks we have, the Vondelpark being the most famous, are a huge mash of people in the summer, from joggers to squatters juggling, people playing frisbee or soccer, others practicing tai chi and other martial arts, people having lunch and dinners in the grass, playing music, making music, dancing. Street artists play on squares where people come to sit down and watch them, terraces are put out in the summer but no one will tell you to leave if you sit not on them but 5 meters in front of them. In the summer, people in my street will carry their chairs outside so they can sit in front of their appartments in the sun, sometimes they eat there too. It makes the street a lot more vibrant than it is now, -1 Celsius and dead. Perhaps that's one of the reasons we cherish our public spaces so much, because it is only a few rare months a year that we get to use them. When the sun comes out, so do the people. Menso -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- All extremists should be taken out and shot -------------------------------------------------------------------------- _________________________________________ reader-list: an open discussion list on media and the city. Critiques & Collaborations To subscribe: send an email to reader-list-request@xxxxxxxxx with subscribe in the subject header. List archive: <https://mail.sarai.net/pipermail/reader-list/> |
|
| <Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
|---|---|---|
| Previous by Date: | the Act of leisure: 00044, iram |
|---|---|
| Next by Date: | X Notes on Practice: 00044, Monica Narula |
| Previous by Thread: | the Act of leisurei: 00044, iram |
| Next by Thread: | Bombay Central Railway Station: 00044, Zainab Bawa |
| Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |
| News | FAQ | advertise |