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Seeing Like an Activist - Civil Disobedience and the Civil Rights Movement (Paperback)
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Seeing Like an Activist - Civil Disobedience and the Civil Rights Movement (Paperback)
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There are few movements more firmly associated with civil
disobedience than the Civil Rights Movement. In the mainstream
imagination, civil rights activists eschewed coercion, appealed to
the majority's principles, and submitted willingly to legal
punishment in order to demand necessary legislative reforms and
facilitate the realization of core constitutional and democratic
principles. Their fidelity to the spirit of the law, commitment to
civility, and allegiance to American democracy set the normative
standard for liberal philosophies of civil disobedience. This
narrative offers the civil disobedience of the Civil Rights
Movement as a moral exemplar: a blueprint for activists who seek
transformative change and racial justice within the bounds of
democracy. Yet in this book, Erin R. Pineda shows how it more often
functions as a disciplining example-a means of scolding activists
and quieting dissent. As Pineda argues, the familiar account of
Civil Rights disobedience not only misremembers history; it also
distorts our political judgments about how civil disobedience might
fit into democratic politics. Seeing Like an Activist charts the
emergence of this influential account of civil disobedience in the
Civil Rights Movement, and demonstrates its reliance on a narrative
about black protest that is itself entangled with white supremacy.
Liberal political theorists whose work informed decades of
scholarship saw civil disobedience "like a white state": taking for
granted the legitimacy of the constitutional order, assuming as
primary the ends of constitutional integrity and stability,
centering the white citizen as the normative ideal, and figuring
the problem of racial injustice as limited, exceptional, and
all-but-already solved. Instead, this book "sees" civil
disobedience from the perspective of an activist, showing the
consequences for ideas about how civil disobedience ought to unfold
in the present. Building on historical and archival evidence,
Pineda shows how civil rights activists, in concert with
anticolonial movements across the globe, turned to civil
disobedience as a practice of decolonization in order to emancipate
themselves and others, and in the process transform the racial
order. Pineda recovers this powerful alternative account by
adopting a different theoretical approach-one which sees activists
as themselves engaged in the creative work of political theorizing.
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