Tracing the multilayered temporalities of Amager Commons, Copenhagen - Enacting Alternate Futures

Linda Lapiņa *, Eduardo Abrantes, Kristine Samson

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

This article contributes to scholarship on urban naturecultures, more-than-human temporalities and arts-based methodologies. It draws on collective walks that we organized in Amager Commons in 2020-2021. The Commons is a former salt meadow, located close to central Copenhagen. Having served as a common for pasture, a garbage dump, and a shooting ground for the military, today, Amager Commons is a high biodiversity zone. While increasingly put to multiple recreational uses, the Commons is also subject to urban development. Consequently, the Commons comprises a battleground for diverse spatiotemporal logics: preservation (of biodiversity), neoliberal urban development, environmental activism, of multiple species living and breeding in the commons.

By wallowing in the multi-layered soils and entangled ecologies of the Commons, we trace how its heterogeneous pasts rupture into the present. This exploration is collective and co-created through walking and noticing, by extending one’s sensorial apparatus. Listening, seeing, touching, tasting, and smelling are framed into cross-modal performative engagements enabling us to become with the entangled naturecultures of the Commons, shaped by emergent and heterogeneous processes and more-than-human presences. We engage polyphonic writing to show how the entwined temporalities of the commons hint to alternate futures, enacting multispecies, heterogeneous imaginaries of the Commons.
Original languageEnglish
JournalUrban Studies
ISSN0042-0980
Publication statusIn preparation - 10 May 2023

Keywords

  • Urban ecology
  • multi- species temporalities
  • Soil
  • arts-based research
  • environmental acitivism
  • Commons

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