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Documents the theories, debates, successes, and failures of a
rebellious tactic to build popular power. Genocide in the
Neighborhood documents the autonomist practice of the
“escrache,†a system of public shaming that emerged in the late
1990s to vindicate the lives of those disappeared under the
Argentinean dictatorship and to protest the amnesty granted to
perpetrators of the killing. The book is an example of
militant research, an investigative method that Colectivo
Situaciones has pioneered. Through a series of hypotheses and two
sets of interviews, Genocide in the
Neighborhood documents the theories, debates, successes, and
failures of the escraches—what Whitener provisionally defines as
“something between a march, an action or happening, and a public
shaming—investigates the nature of rebellion, discusses the value
of historical and cultural memory to resistance, and suggests
decentralized ways to agitate for justice. The book follows
the popular Argentine uprising in 2001, a period of intense social
unrest and political creativity that led to the collapse of
government after government. The power that ordinary people
developed for themselves in public space soon gave birth to a
movement of neighborhoods organizing themselves into hundreds of
popular assemblies across the country, the unemployed workers
struggle mobilizing, and workers taking over factories and
businesses. These events marked a sea change, a before and an after
for Argentina that has since resonated around the world. In its
wake Genocide in the Neighborhood tactfully deploys a
much needed model of political resistance.
In an uprising heard around the world, people in Argentina took to
the streets on December 19th & 20th, 2001, shouting "!Que se
vayan todos!" These words (All of them out!), and the thousands of
people banging pots and pans, opened a period of intense social
unrest and political creativity that led to the collapse of
government after government. Neighborhoods organized themselves
into hundreds of popular assemblies across the country, the
unemployed workers movement acquired a new visibility, workers took
over factories and businesses. Deeply involved in these movements
were the activists who made up Colectivo Situaciones. With the
embers of that December's aftermath still burning, Colectivo
Situaciones militantly researched and wrote 19 and 20. Locating
themselves among the "horizontally organized subjectivities that
insisted on not being represented by politicians but maintaining
and developing their own powers of political expression" that
Micheal Hardt notes in his introduction, Colectivo Situaciones
gathers, interrogates, and offers forth the words of unemployed
workers, factory occupiers, insurgent intellectuals, and children
of the disappeared. From their investigations is revealed the birth
of a new social protagonism and the de-institutional power
(potencia) they wield. 19 and 20 has been praised as this
generation's 18th Brumaire and as Marx's analysis of that struggle
helped set the stage for, twenty years later, the Paris Commune we
find ourselves here. Revisiting and exploring the forms of
counterpower that emerged from the shadow of neoliberal rule we
find the book's potencia has only grown. In the intervening years
the analysis of Colectivo Situaciones has been passed from hand to
hand and multitudes of citizens from different countries have
learned their own ways to chant !Que se vayan todos!, from Iceland
to Tunisia, from Spain to Greece, from Tahrir Square to Black Lives
Matter. Colectivo Situaciones' practice of militant research--of
engaging with movements' own thought processes--resonates with
everyone seeking to think current events and movements, and through
that to gather the foundation of a commune for the 21st century.
Locuentos es un libro de locos y de locuras. Un libro que cuenta,
desde la perspectiva de dieciocho autores de distintas
nacionalidades, los extranos comportamientos de la mente humana
cuando traspasa los limites de la cordura.
"Todo lo que una vez fue vivido directamente se ha convertido en
una mera representacion." "La sociedad del espectaculo" proporciona
una reinterpretacion del marxismo, sobre todo del concepto de
fetiche de la mercancia aplicado a las condiciones del capitalismo
contemporaneo. Guy Debord argumenta que la historia de la vida
social se puede entender como la declinacion del ser en tener, y
del tener en simplemente parecer. Esta condicion en la cual la
realidad se ha substituido por su imagen representa el momento
historico contemporaneo, cuando la mercancia completa su
colonizacion de la vida social: las relaciones entre mercancias han
suplantado las relaciones entre las personas y, en estas, la
identificacion pasiva con el espectaculo suplanta la actividad
genuina. El espectaculo no es una coleccion de imagenes, escribe
Debord, en cambio, es una relacion social entre la gente que es
mediada por imagenes.
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