This new work takes as departing point acquisition of land on the Moon, and invites citizens from Porto Alegre to engage in collectively imagining how the Moon should be urbanized and inhabited. Nobody owns the moon, but its image belongs to us all, and is available, without exceptions, to anyone. Still, we, humans, are outsiders. We can perhaps imagine being there, or we can imagine what we could do there.
In one of his last lectures, Foucault proposes to consider truth-telling as a specific activity, or as a role. He distinguishes four modes of telling the truth: the prophet (who understands truth as destiny), the sage (who understands truth as being), the teacher-technician (truth as techne) and the parrhesiast (who talks truth in his own name and therefore takes a risk). Parrhesia is a figure of speech described as: to speak candidly or to ask forgiveness for so speaking.
The Brazilian tradition of the repentistas (or trovadores in the South) may be understood as similar to this; improvised poetry duels that one may encounter in the streets, and a form of grassroots poetry where two poets singing verses made up in the moment compete in an argument with rhymed verses meant to provoke yet another response. The words are usually performed to the rhythm of a tambourine, guitar or other instrument. This tradition is borrowed to function as a means of staging the dialogues on the participatory budget.
Loosely mixing the different characters of the parrhesia and the tradition of the repentistas the script based on the many conversations we had during our research on the participatory budget: conversations with participants, critics, policymakers, as well as studies on the subject. The conversations allow the different voices that occur to become manifest as a dispute, as a discursive and imaginative fight set in action and staged as making public space, in order to take space and time to