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Internationaleries 33

in which the normative status of geography—one of the easiest to manipulate

of all scholarly disciplines—was grotesquely revealed. Additional unitary

urbanist actions were executed the next year in Brussels that consisted

of a series of unplanned ludic games and détourned maps of the city.

The psychogeographies created in Brussels also produced a drift

or dérive that collectively “discovered” and reframed the city, its civic functions

or its lack of them. Brussels, once the site of the Second International,

was at this moment in the cold war being transformed into the administrative

and political center of NATO and by extension of the West. In theory,

any collective, absurdist activity staged by LI would turn upside-down this

transformed Brussels, recovering whatever remained of its older existence,

and offer its citizens a radical mode of action for retrieving their city from

the grips of techno-bureaucratization. Unitary urbanism was therefore a tactical

rejection of ofWcially imposed forms of urbanism including its covert

policy of colonization, separation, fragmentation, and social isolation. Simultaneously,

it offered the very opposite: a unifying if ephemeral act of serious

festivity that was highly participatory and collectively realized.

One of the main conceptual forces behind unitary urbanism was

a continuing interest in the writings of Henri Lefebvre. Particularly inXuential

was his critique of the techno-bureaucratic regulation of cities, a process

he termed the modernist “production of space.” 60 In different ways the

ultimate goal of unitary urbanism was a restoration of a totally human experience.

This restoration was not unlike Lefebvre’s concept of the festival as

a celebration of the collective ownership of urban space. In this sense the

theory and practice of unitary urbanist action was always conceived of as “a

total critical act,” and not just another “doctrine.” 61 Some of these ideas

percolated through SI writings prior to 1956 including Debord’s 1955 study,

Critique of Urban Geography, or Ivan Chtcheglov’s 1953 text, Formulary for

a New Urbanism. At the same time the critique of functionalism had already

led them to previously denounce the modernist architect Le Corbusier and

to détourne his famous phrase that the house is “machine for living” into

their own interpretation: the “house as the machine for surprises.” 62 In 1957

the “Report on the Construction of Situations” sought to make a clear turn

away from an avant-gardism always controlled by the bourgeoisie and toward

a more engaged form of direct action. 63 It was later that the group planned

an “agitation and inWltration” 64 of UNESCO headquarters in Paris that was

intended to ridicule its techno-bureaucratization of culture at that time.

However the action was never executed. And while the concept of wreaking

havoc on the so-called “international” distribution of “cultural needs”

hoped to set in motion a truly global, if decidedly cultural, revolution, these

radical goals remained in the Wnal analysis merely theoretical.

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