The Dictionary of Human Geography

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bourgeois public sphere is nonetheless widely
criticized for universalizing a model that arose
within exclusionary (male, bourgeois, white)
spaces in historically specific European
societies (Howell, 1993; Mitchell, 2003a).
Feminists have argued thatgenderexclusions
are constitutive (and not simply incidental to)
Habermas’s idealization of the bourgeois pub-
lic sphere (Fraser, 1997), and that he unwit-
tingly reproduces a separate spheres ideology
that has been the focus of so much feminist
criticism and organizing (seefeminism;femi-
nist geographies). This is anideologythat
renders domestic space as the repository of the
emotions and private interest, and women ‘by
nature, guardians of the ‘‘household of emo-
tions’’. .. a kind of sphere within [the private]
sphere’ (Marston, 1990, p. 456).
A notion of public sphere is nonetheless
central to democratic theory and practice
(see radical democracy), and there have
been numerous, including important feminist,
attempts to rethink it in contemporary con-
texts. Fraser (1997) does this by questioning
four of Habermas’ assumptions, including the
liberal assumptions that private interests are
antagonistic to the public sphere, and that
one cohesive public sphere is the ideal. She
argues for a theory of multiple, contending,
sometimes mutually exclusive public spheres.
This questioning and retheorization reflects a
feminist understanding that what counts as
private and public is itself the result of political
struggle, and a scepticism about the ways in
which concepts of ‘privacy’ and ‘the private’
often protect dominant (male) interests by de-
politicizing a range of issues (such as spousal
assault and child care) and legitimating the
oppression of women.
Feminist retheorizing of multiple public
spheres tends to emphasize the many ways in
which a separate-spheres ideology continues
to haunt dominant public spheres, and the
persistent traffic between constructions of
public and private. Fraser (1989) has
described how the US state has installed a
separate-spheres ideology within systems of
social welfare provision, so that women are
often positioned as dependents and men as
deserving bearers ofrights. In her analysis
of a powerful coalition of women’s organiza-
tions advocating the rights of women to public
safety in northern Mexico, Wright (2005)
notes that activists in these organizations ‘face
the paradox that by exercising their demo-
cratic voices through public protest, they are
dismissed, by their detractors, as ‘‘unfit’’ cit-
izens, based on their contamination as ‘‘public

women’’ ’ (p. 279). And though they can chal-
lenge this ‘twisted logic’, ‘they cannot fully
escape its implications’ (p. 279). Berlant
argues that in the USA over the past 25 years,
the public sphere has collapsed into the intim-
ate, such that ‘the family sphere [is] consid-
ered the moral, ethical, and political horizon
of national and political interest’ (1997,
p. 262).
Geographers have sought to theorize the
relations between the public sphere(s) and
public space. There is a reticence simply to
layer the terms on to each other, in part
because much political organizing, especially
for non-dominant groups, takes place in so-
called private spaces, and thus there is a need
to expand our thinking about the spaces of
politics (or the public sphere) (Staeheli,
1996). Nevertheless, public spheres and pub-
lic spaces are linked. The regulation of public
space is instrumental in regulating public
debate and excluding some groups from
public life, and ‘public spaces are decisive,
for it is here that the desires and needs of
individuals and groups can be seen, and
therefore recognized, resisted, or ... wiped
out’ (Mitchell, 2003, p. 33). The distinction
between spheres and spaces preserves the
understanding that the concept of public
sphere is in large part a democratic ideal that
we strive towards, in and through the con-
struction and use of public space. It is an
ideal that can be redeployed by those who
are excluded from actual political spaces – to
demand inclusion within them. For this rea-
son, some theorists have been drawn to the
metaphorof ‘empty space’ to articulate the
inevitably unfulfilled promise of a democratic
public sphere (Pratt, 2004). gp

Suggested reading
Fraser (1997); Mitchell (2003).

private interest developments (pids)
Communal housing projects in the USA (also
known ascommunity interest developmentsand
common interest communities), in which the
propertyis held in common and its use gov-
erned by a homeowners’ association. Those
associations – many of which have consider-
able power over what can be done within the
development – operate as ‘private govern-
ments’ separate from thestate apparatus,
although their decisions can be challenged
legally. Originally associated with condomini-
ums, the pid form ofgovernancehas spread
to other housing types, covering more than
10 per cent of all US housing and a much

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PRIVATE INTEREST DEVELOPMENTS (PIDS)
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