Text: Aubry Cornelis
Photos: Deborah Puylaert
With the launch of konekt.brussels, VUB is encouraging its students to embrace the city more than ever. What can we expect from such an experiment? Michael De Cock, artistic director of the Royal Flemish Theatre KVS, Free De Backer, professor of education science, and social geographer Bas van Heur, director of the Brussels Centre for Urban Research, have given it some thought.
Where better for a young person to come of age than in the city? De Cock: âA city is overwhelming, and it does something to you. All those choices, all that free time. For the first time youâre really focused on one study area. That made a big impression on me.â And Van Heur agrees. âThe complexity of the city has a particular appeal when youâre moving from adolescence to adulthood,â he says. De Backer: âA university in a big city must examine society in terms of urban challenges.â âWatch out,â De Cock warns. âJust like the wrong discipline, you can also choose the wrong city. Thatâs also something to consider.â
Living alongside each other isnât ideal, nor is forcefully looking for cohesion. I believe more in the friction of difference.
A ghetto and romantic longing
Is the city the natural habitat of the free-thinker, of the recalcitrant world-changer? Thatâs perhaps a little simplistic. The question is rather: what interaction brings out the best of a city? Van Heur reminds us that states were founded on cities, which to a certain extent applies to nationalistic thinking. âWas that new, progressive thinking at the time? New, yes, but not progressive per se. That mistake often enters the discourse about the city: that new automatically means progressive. In cities you have lots of people close together. Itâs only in this context that niches can survive; in a village there isnât the critical mass. The anonymity of a city makes that possible. For me thatâs positive.â
De Cock: âAre you saying that segregation doesnât have to be a problem?â Van Heur: âIndeed. It doesnât have to be.â De Cock: âThe pendulum can swing dangerously quickly.â Van Heur: âForcing more social interaction doesnât solve all our problems. If you call a lack of social cohesion problematic, then youâre creating that romantic longing for a homogenous society. So I really donât believe in that.â
That mistake often enters the discourse about the city: that new automatically means progressive.
Wild thinking
Let Brussels and its students discover each other, in short, without a script. Thatâs what a laboratory set-up is all about in the end, isnât it? De Cock: âQuestions about how we look at mobility, ecology, work and free time have a big future. Mindblowers, the play that artists and scientists put on stage on 25 September, puts that in concrete terms. We asked artists and academics what resistance means for them. The answers from both groups showed a striking agreement: the desire to give something back.â
Van Heur: âMore than a laboratory â that is primarily a metaphor â the city is a setting in which you can study circumstances in order to improve them. Itâs about feasibility, thinking together about models, solutions, practical things. Itâs experimental. We donât have a solution lying around. We keep modifying until something useable and sustainable comes out. It often works.â De Cock recognises this. âThat sounds like an artistic process. Thereâs so many useless things said about culture and academic strength. Weâre so focused on efficiency; that market thinking eats us up.â
The three are in agreement about one thing: too much efficiency comes at the cost of âwildâ thinking. If art and research become too instrumental, it weakens their power of expression.
According to De Backer, it depends on how far you zoom in. âThe European quarter is really a ghetto. Although there is a healthy interaction between people of different nationalities, it remains a closed society. Free thinking depends on who crosses your path. Interaction is crucial.â âAnd how can you bring all these interactions together?â De Cock wonders. âHow do you get the most out of a dynamic city? Take the cooperation between the KVS and VUB. How can cultural and academic institutions interact with each other?â
Van Heur: âLiving alongside each other isnât ideal, nor is forcefully looking for cohesion. I believe more in the friction of difference. VUB perhaps sets a bad example, by isolating itself on its own campus. Itâs not particularly conducive to developing an urban mindset.â
Wrong glasses, wrong focus
Rector Caroline Pauwels calls inequality a huge challenge for the city. Is the city a catalyst, or should it reduce inequality? De Cock: âBy all means. Reducing the democratic deficit, making sure that the resources for education and culture end up in the right places. The city must play an active role in that. We donât live in the suburbs, and a monocultural Brussels doesnât exist. Here, the majority is made up of minorities!â
Really, a city is in itself one continuous circle of knowledge.
De Backer believes that policymakers too often see things through Flemish eyes. A recent study of the leisure needs of young people in the Brussels canal zone showed that they had informally developed their own places to spend time. âThatâs not to say that existing organisations shouldnât receive any more resources to invest in free time and cultural participation, but it does show that we donât completely understand Brussels.â
âReally, a city is in itself one continuous circle of knowledge,â Van Heur remarks. âA university doesnât always get to lead, and thatâs hard. Universities are no longer centres of power and knowledge. But because of institutional heritage and all kinds of financial conditions, they have no choice but to cling on to that.â
According to De Backer, there is still a hierarchy of different forms of research. âNot everybody needs academic knowledge.â Van Heur agrees. âIf weâre going for urban engagement, we have to recognise that we canât always be the dominant partner. We have to learn from others, and above all learn to absorb other forms of knowledge.â
Itâs down to education and culture to start another discussion. Thatâs why itâs good that young people are already discovering the city via the university.
De Cock adds: âThe whole idea of studying and culture needs to be rethought. We need fewer top-down approaches. Thereâs been an enormous revolution in recent years. And not just on the stage. Communities have formed that have seen to that. The challenge then is to steer institutions like the KVS and VUB in these new networks.â
Top of the world
A monotone view of knowledge is not the only difficulty. Subjects that we associate with Brussels are also becoming passĂ©. Brussels is not a foreigner surrounded by Flemish bourgeoisie. Van Heur: âThere is a big difference between what is spread in the media and what is actually happening on the ground. In the past ten years, Brussels and its hinterland havenât grown apart, the differences are in fact diminishing.â But according to De Cock, political soundbites tell a different story.
Van Heur: âItâs down to education and culture to start another discussion. Thatâs why itâs good that young people are already discovering the city via the university. You get to know the city through your own experiences, and not from what youâve heard.â De Backer: âPeople need to find out themselves if Brussels is something for them.â De Cock: âWhen it comes to the arts scene, dance, theatre, the world is paying attention to what is happening here. The explosion of creativity and talent arouses jealousy. Weâre not part of a leading group, weâre out in front on our own. This city is looking towards the future. Letâs lose this fatalistic attitude.â
âIf the starting point is defeatism, then the shutters quickly come down,â De Backer notes. âSo you lose sight of valuable things. The success of our dance scene is nothing new, for example. But weâre not aware enough of it. So we donât make enough of it, we donât link it to the Brussels identity.â
Van Heur is in complete agreement. âLetâs reposition our frame of reference. Think about the future, and see Brussels not just as a part of Belgium. Focus for example on our cultural leadership in a European setting.â De Cock pipes up: âWe do nothing but this! But itâs not always heard. Another strange thing: multilingualism. Why do some see that as a problem and others something to be proud of? I donât believe in turning a subject like diversity into a problem.â Van Heur: âBrussels is overdefined. The stories are so standardised. If anywhere needs more diversity, itâs the stories about Brussels.â