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The Walls Have the Floor - Mural Journal, May '68 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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The Walls Have the Floor - Mural Journal, May '68 (Paperback)
Series: The Walls Have the Floor
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List price R383
Loot Price R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
You Save R73 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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The graffiti of the French student and worker uprising of May 1968,
capturing participatory politics in action. Graffiti itself became
a form of freedom. -Julien Besancon, The Walls Have the Floor Fifty
years ago, in 1968, barricades were erected in the streets of Paris
for the first time since the Paris Commune of nearly one hundred
years before. The events of May 1968 began with student protests
against the Vietnam War and American imperialism, expanded to
rebellion over student living conditions and resistance to
capitalist consumerism. An uprising at the Sorbonne was followed by
wildcat strikes across France, uniting students and workers and
bringing the country's economy to a halt. There have been many
accounts of these events. This book tells the story in a different
way, through the graffiti inscribed by protestors as they
protested. The graffiti collected here is by turns poetic, punning,
hopeful, sarcastic, and crude. It quotes poets as often as it does
political thinkers. Many wrote "I have nothing to write," signaling
not their naivete but their desire to participate. Other anonymous
declarations included "Prohibiting prohibited"; "The dream is
reality"; "The walls have ears. Your ears have walls";
"Exaggeration is the beginning of invention"; "Comrades, you're
nitpicking"; "You don't beg for the right to live, you take it";
and "I came/I saw/I believed." A meeting is called at the Grand
Amphitheater of the Sorbonne: "Agenda: the worldwide revolution."
This was interactive, participatory politics before Twitter and
Facebook. Although the revolution of May 1968 didn't topple the
government (Charles de Gaulle fled the country, only to return; in
June, his party won a resounding electoral mandate), it made
history. In The Walls Have the Floor, Julien Besancon collected
traces of this history before the walls were painted over, and
published this collection in July 1968 even as the paint was
drying. Read today, the graffiti of 1968 captures, in a way no
conventional history can, the defining spontaneity of the events.
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