ABSTRACT

The chapter presents the case of a collective of students in Italy as an alternative small-scale form of political and cultural action, and explores its dynamics and limits. The research dataset rely on recent qualitative research (ethnography and in-depth interviews from March 2017 to April 2018), among 26 activists aged between 19 and 26 composed by high-cultural-capital young adults who squatted in an empty building in the centre of Milan in order to create a brand new space for both political and artistic action, sharing one another’s skills and information. Drawing on the seminal work by Paul Willis on working-class subculture, the chapter shows that middle-class young adults oppose the aesthetics and the neoliberal discourse of the hard work – that they find in the mechanisms of the educational paradigm – a discourse of creativity and talent built collectively outside the scholastic institution. This change of perspective is possible thanks to the spaces of reflexivity opened by the same fragmentation of the habitus generated by the precariousness produced by the incongruences between the school system and the labour market.