99 – The Impossible Possibility of ‘Home’

What does it mean to be at ‘home’, when ‘home’ is the expression of structural forms of violence, at the intersection of anthropocentrism, patriarchy, heteronormativity and racial capitalism? As the COVID-19 pandemic showed, home can be read as a juncture where many of the inequalities of our time come and are held together structurally; yet, at the same time, home maintains an attractive lure to itself, as a place one is called to defend or to work toward, in order to be freed from subjections that seem to render home impossible in the first place. In this talk, the aim is to stay close to this only apparent contradiction, which Michele would like to name the “impossible possibility of home.” With this notion, he interprets the unjust and violent foundations of home not as opposite to, but as foundational to, its capacity to allude to one’s own betterment in terms of belonging, security, and care. This means to say that the lure of home as a space of belonging is emerging from the foundations of home itself, rather than being a means toward salvation from its violence. The impossible possibility of home lies in home’s capacity to sell a diagram of liberation as a line of flight, a breakthrough from its unjust underpinnings, while in immanent, lived, and felt terms, that diagram is a very powerful function of those.

The speaker in this episode is Michele Lancione, an Urban Scholar, who is not only thinking about cities, but also actively reshaping how we understand them.

Michele Lancione

Michele (he/they) is Professor of Economic and Political Geography at the Polytechnic of Turin, Italy, and Visiting Professor of Urban Studies at the University of Sheffield, United Kingdom. They are the founder and co-director of the Beyond Inhabitation Lab (with AbdouMaliq Simone) and Director of the Master’s Degree in Geography and Territorial Sciences at the University of Turin. Michele’s qualitative work offers a critical approach to homing, housing and urban habitation at the intersection of gender, race, class and institutional violence. Currently, their research is centred on histories of housing justice and homeless service provision in Naples, Italy. Previously, they worked on an ERC-funded project titled “Inhabiting Radical Housing” (2020-2025) and on a multi-sited ethnography on racialised dispossession in Bucharest, Romania (2014-2019). Michele is part of the editorial boards of IJURR and EPD: Society and Space, and has been one of the co-founders and editors of the Radical Housing Journal. Their latest book is “For a Liberatory Politics of Home”, Duke University Press (2023). Connect via www.michelelancione.eu


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