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Contemporary articulations of dissent to social order and its
production of truth cannot be ignored any longer. Hamburg, during
the G20 gathering, Washington D.C. on the day of Trump's
inauguration, the squares and streets of Paris and Tunis at the end
of 2018. Public space is temporarily taken by those who rise
against the powers that keep structural oppression and social order
in its place. Not only riots, collective social centres, protest
camps and temporary as well as permanent occupations of lands and
buildings are other, utopian spatial alternatives created by
autonomous social movements to prefigure a horizontal social
organisation. This book discusses spatial practices of autonomous
social movements, the movements who "see their everyday experiences
and creations as the revolution they are making", together with
these movements and in taking the diversity of their articulations
into account. Sites of Dissent is thus the story of a daring
attempt to create research for radical transformation which
requires a radical transformation of research practices. During
this attempt, methodological rules of scientific research are
broken, methodological heresy and wild experimentation with
research practices take place. Sites of Dissent aims at opening new
possibilities of including diverse ways of knowing and speaking
into a collective knowledge creation process, at overcoming the
individualised isolation in which the researcher produces knowledge
about the outside world; and it aims to create a space for
collective learning about spatial practices of autonomous social
movements, to learn with and from the movements.
Riots and Militant Occupations provides students with theoretical
reflections and qualitative case studies on militant contentious
political action across a range from across Europe to Nigeria,
China and Turkey. This multi-authored, interdisciplinary collection
adopts an interpretive and participatory approach to examining
meanings, affects, embodiment, identity, relationality and space in
the context of riots and protests. The rapidly shifting terrain of
riots and occupations has left existing social-scientific theories
lagging behind, challenging dominant constructions of agency and
rationality. This book will fill this gap, by offering new
understandings and critical perspectives on the question of what
happens in space, in time and between people, during and after
riots. Weaving together observations, experiences and analyses of
riots from participants, theorists and social scientists, the
authors craft theoretical perspectives in close connection with
researched practices. These perspectives take the form of new
theoretical contributions on the spatiality, affectivity and
immanent meaning of riots, and grassroots qualitative case-studies
of particular events and contexts. Countering the preconceptions of
riots as a trail of broken windows, burned dumpsters and angry
conservatives, this book aims to demonstrate that riots are
fundamentally creative, generating forms of meaning, power,
knowledge, affect, social connection and participatory space which
are rare, and sociologically important, in the modern world.
Riots and Militant Occupations provides students with theoretical
reflections and qualitative case studies on militant contentious
political action across a range from across Europe to Nigeria,
China and Turkey. This multi-authored, interdisciplinary collection
adopts an interpretive and participatory approach to examining
meanings, affects, embodiment, identity, relationality and space in
the context of riots and protests. The rapidly shifting terrain of
riots and occupations has left existing social-scientific theories
lagging behind, challenging dominant constructions of agency and
rationality. This book will fill this gap, by offering new
understandings and critical perspectives on the question of what
happens in space, in time and between people, during and after
riots. Weaving together observations, experiences and analyses of
riots from participants, theorists and social scientists, the
authors craft theoretical perspectives in close connection with
researched practices. These perspectives take the form of new
theoretical contributions on the spatiality, affectivity and
immanent meaning of riots, and grassroots qualitative case-studies
of particular events and contexts. Countering the preconceptions of
riots as a trail of broken windows, burned dumpsters and angry
conservatives, this book aims to demonstrate that riots are
fundamentally creative, generating forms of meaning, power,
knowledge, affect, social connection and participatory space which
are rare, and sociologically important, in the modern world.
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