FREEWORLD=NEWWORLD=FREEWORLD=NEWWORLD=?
And Now! Just Discovered! Right here in Downtown Brooklyn!
Brooklyn Free Store!*
*Have yet to venture down those parts, but when I do, I will sure to find this FREEWORLD and examine its locational context, interview its customers and proprietor/organizers and take/swap stuff.
Must prepare questions for interview beforehand, remember my dictaphone.
e.g. [ranging from]
Do you believe this Free World is a New World?
Do you think that by creating these spaces/sites of Freedom/Free-ness that it encourages local communities to swap possessions?
Do you believe these spaces/sites give the opportunity for the 'invisible homeless' and local residents to take and swap things that they would otherwise feel self-concious about simply taking off the street?
Do you feel more people should reclaim spaces and sites like these for the benefit and engagement/interaction between local residents and communities?
Brooklyn Free Store!*
Some of those who started the Free Store in early July had also played a role in operating an earlier incarnation, which was run out of a storefront in Williamsburg from 1999 until 2005. Both stores drew inspiration from the original Diggers, a group of agrarian utopians in 17th-century England, as well as from another group that adopted the same name more than 40 years ago and opened storefronts in San Francisco and in New York where items were dropped off and picked up without any money changing hands.
*Have yet to venture down those parts, but when I do, I will sure to find this FREEWORLD and examine its locational context, interview its customers and proprietor/organizers and take/swap stuff.
Must prepare questions for interview beforehand, remember my dictaphone.
e.g. [ranging from]
Do you believe this Free World is a New World?
Do you think that by creating these spaces/sites of Freedom/Free-ness that it encourages local communities to swap possessions?
Do you believe these spaces/sites give the opportunity for the 'invisible homeless' and local residents to take and swap things that they would otherwise feel self-concious about simply taking off the street?
Do you feel more people should reclaim spaces and sites like these for the benefit and engagement/interaction between local residents and communities?
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