Metaphilosophy and the Production of Space: A Metaphilosophical Reading of the Politics of Space and the Creation of the Modern City in Lefebvre's Thought

Document Type : علمی - پژوهشی

Authors

1 Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Kurdistan, Sanandaj, Iran.

2 Ph.D. in Sociology

10.48308/kj.2025.239979.1324

Abstract

A significant part of contemporary transformation is linked to social and urban relations. Such changes must be examined beyond traditional philosophical approaches and within the context of urban society and its associated material and cultural dynamics. From a metaphilosophical perspective, urban reality is both a socio-political-economic construct and a generative force that simultaneously produces and expresses social relations on both material and cultural levels. Traditional philosophy has typically detached its concepts from concrete contexts and lived bodies, striving for totalization and identity. Lefebvre’s metaphilosophy rejects the imposition of such disembodied totality and abstract rationality on the city. Instead, it creates independent and spontaneous practical-material forms within the fabric of everyday urban life to engage with reality.
This study aims to examine Lefebvre’s metaphilosophical insights into the politics of space and his role in redefining and reshaping urban space. In this context, overcoming the traditional concept of space and imagining a dynamic, functionalist notion of space is proposed as a central aspect of realizing metaphilosophy—through which concrete, practical, and embodied approaches to space emerge. The central questions of this investigation are: To what extent did Lefebvre, by proposing metaphilosophy as a tool to critique traditional philosophy, convey a deeper understanding of the relationship between subject and space and thus arrive at a new definition of the modern city? And what possibilities does this reading open up? In this sense, metaphilosophy seeks moments in which the city emerges as a product of collective civic practice, rather than being presupposed as a phenomenon predetermined by dominant discourses, as in metaphysical approaches.

Keywords

Main Subjects


Harvey, D. (2008). Urbanization of Capital, the Second Cycle of Capital Accumulation in the Production of the Built Environment. Translated by Aref Aghwami Moghadam. Tehran: Akhtaran. (In Persian)
Harvey, D. (1993). The Nature of the Environment: Dialectics of Social and Environmental Change.  The Socialist Register (vol. 29, pp. 1-50). London: Merlin Press.
Lefebvre, H. (1991). The Production of Space. Translated by Donald Nicholson-Smith. Oxford: Blackwell.
Lefebvre, H. (2016). Metaphilosophy. edited with an introduction by Stuart Elden translated by David Fernbach Postface: Marxism and Poetry. by Georges Labica. London: Verso.
Merrifield, A. (2017). The Right to the City. Retrieved from: https://andymerrifield.org/2017/01/22/fifty-years-on-the-right-to-the-city
Mommersteeg, B. (2014). Space, Territory, Occupy: Towards a Non-Phenomenological Dwelling. The University of Western Ontario: Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository.
Merrifield, A. (2017). Place, Space, Lefebvre’s Compromise, An Introduction to Henri Lefebvre’s Production of Space. Compiled and translated by Aydin Torkeme. Tehran: Tisa. (In Persian).
Shields, R. (1999). Lefebvre, Love and Struggle: Spatial Dialectics. USA: Routledge.
Shields, R. (2013). Spatial Questions: Cultural Topologies and Social Spatializations. USA: Sage Publications.
Stanek, L. (2014). Space as Concrete Abstraction, in Space, Resistance and Everyday Life. Edied by Kanistega Gunawardena and Stefan Kiefer. Translated by Afshin Khakbaz and Mohammad Fazeli. Tehran: Tisa Publishing. (In Persian)