Shon Meckfessel
Nonviolence Ain't What It Used to Be
Unarmed Insurrection and the Rhetoric of Resistance
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Shon Meckfessel
Nonviolence Ain't What It Used to Be
Unarmed Insurrection and the Rhetoric of Resistance
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Nonviolence ain't what it used to be. A guide to today's forms of political struggle.
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Nonviolence ain't what it used to be. A guide to today's forms of political struggle.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: AK Press
- Seitenzahl: 250
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. November 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 139mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 293g
- ISBN-13: 9781849352291
- ISBN-10: 1849352291
- Artikelnr.: 42603334
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: AK Press
- Seitenzahl: 250
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. November 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 139mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 293g
- ISBN-13: 9781849352291
- ISBN-10: 1849352291
- Artikelnr.: 42603334
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Shon Meckfessel has been active in disruptive social movements for nearly 25 years, beginning in his native Sacramento, CA. After blocking highways to stop the first Persian Gulf War, he was never again inclined to petitionary protest. He has since researched and participated in social movements across the US, Western and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Latin America. Shon is the author of Suffled How It Gush: A North American Anarchist in the Balkans as well as numerous essays and articles. He has appeared as a social movement scholar and advocate in the New York Times and on Democracy Now, Al Jazeera, CNN, NPR, BBC, Radio, and Fox News. Shon is a member of the English Faculty at Highline College.
Introduction
Part I
1.0 Neoliberal Exigences
1.1 Managed Dissent: Indirect Rule, Consumerism, and the NPIC
1.1a Political Institutionalization of Dissent
1.1b Indirect Rule
1.1c Consumerism
1.1d Institutionalized Dissent as "Civil Society"
1.2 Policing as a Non-Tangential Exigency
1.3 From Masses to Publics
1.3a Why Elizabeth Eckford is Still Alive
1.3b We Are the 94%
1.3c Hannah Arendt and the Direct Demos
Part II
2.0 The Strange Magic of Nonviolence
2.1 Introduction: What Happened to Nonviolence?
2.2 The Nonopposition of Non/Violence
2.3 Disavowal by Non/Definition
2.4 Condemnatory Equivalizing
2.5 Nonviolence as a Strategy of Condescension
2.6 Nonviolence as Conflict Aversion
Part III
3.0 The Eloquence of Targeted Property Destruction
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Forced Comparison
3.3 Desubjectification
3.4 Profanation
Part IV
4.0 The Eloquence of Police Clashes
4.1 Disidentification
4.2 Disinvestment
4.3 Empowering Reversal
4.4 Backlighting
Part V
5.0 The Characteristics of Movements to Come
5.1 Who (and How) Was Occupy?
5.1a Who (And Which) are The People?
5.1b Topics and their Publics
5.2 After Victimhood, Beyond Innocence
5.2a After Victimhood
5.2b Beyond Innocence
5.3 Agency and Possibility in Defigurative Politics
5.3a Semiotic Transgression
Index
Part I
1.0 Neoliberal Exigences
1.1 Managed Dissent: Indirect Rule, Consumerism, and the NPIC
1.1a Political Institutionalization of Dissent
1.1b Indirect Rule
1.1c Consumerism
1.1d Institutionalized Dissent as "Civil Society"
1.2 Policing as a Non-Tangential Exigency
1.3 From Masses to Publics
1.3a Why Elizabeth Eckford is Still Alive
1.3b We Are the 94%
1.3c Hannah Arendt and the Direct Demos
Part II
2.0 The Strange Magic of Nonviolence
2.1 Introduction: What Happened to Nonviolence?
2.2 The Nonopposition of Non/Violence
2.3 Disavowal by Non/Definition
2.4 Condemnatory Equivalizing
2.5 Nonviolence as a Strategy of Condescension
2.6 Nonviolence as Conflict Aversion
Part III
3.0 The Eloquence of Targeted Property Destruction
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Forced Comparison
3.3 Desubjectification
3.4 Profanation
Part IV
4.0 The Eloquence of Police Clashes
4.1 Disidentification
4.2 Disinvestment
4.3 Empowering Reversal
4.4 Backlighting
Part V
5.0 The Characteristics of Movements to Come
5.1 Who (and How) Was Occupy?
5.1a Who (And Which) are The People?
5.1b Topics and their Publics
5.2 After Victimhood, Beyond Innocence
5.2a After Victimhood
5.2b Beyond Innocence
5.3 Agency and Possibility in Defigurative Politics
5.3a Semiotic Transgression
Index
Introduction
Part I
1.0 Neoliberal Exigences
1.1 Managed Dissent: Indirect Rule, Consumerism, and the NPIC
1.1a Political Institutionalization of Dissent
1.1b Indirect Rule
1.1c Consumerism
1.1d Institutionalized Dissent as "Civil Society"
1.2 Policing as a Non-Tangential Exigency
1.3 From Masses to Publics
1.3a Why Elizabeth Eckford is Still Alive
1.3b We Are the 94%
1.3c Hannah Arendt and the Direct Demos
Part II
2.0 The Strange Magic of Nonviolence
2.1 Introduction: What Happened to Nonviolence?
2.2 The Nonopposition of Non/Violence
2.3 Disavowal by Non/Definition
2.4 Condemnatory Equivalizing
2.5 Nonviolence as a Strategy of Condescension
2.6 Nonviolence as Conflict Aversion
Part III
3.0 The Eloquence of Targeted Property Destruction
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Forced Comparison
3.3 Desubjectification
3.4 Profanation
Part IV
4.0 The Eloquence of Police Clashes
4.1 Disidentification
4.2 Disinvestment
4.3 Empowering Reversal
4.4 Backlighting
Part V
5.0 The Characteristics of Movements to Come
5.1 Who (and How) Was Occupy?
5.1a Who (And Which) are The People?
5.1b Topics and their Publics
5.2 After Victimhood, Beyond Innocence
5.2a After Victimhood
5.2b Beyond Innocence
5.3 Agency and Possibility in Defigurative Politics
5.3a Semiotic Transgression
Index
Part I
1.0 Neoliberal Exigences
1.1 Managed Dissent: Indirect Rule, Consumerism, and the NPIC
1.1a Political Institutionalization of Dissent
1.1b Indirect Rule
1.1c Consumerism
1.1d Institutionalized Dissent as "Civil Society"
1.2 Policing as a Non-Tangential Exigency
1.3 From Masses to Publics
1.3a Why Elizabeth Eckford is Still Alive
1.3b We Are the 94%
1.3c Hannah Arendt and the Direct Demos
Part II
2.0 The Strange Magic of Nonviolence
2.1 Introduction: What Happened to Nonviolence?
2.2 The Nonopposition of Non/Violence
2.3 Disavowal by Non/Definition
2.4 Condemnatory Equivalizing
2.5 Nonviolence as a Strategy of Condescension
2.6 Nonviolence as Conflict Aversion
Part III
3.0 The Eloquence of Targeted Property Destruction
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Forced Comparison
3.3 Desubjectification
3.4 Profanation
Part IV
4.0 The Eloquence of Police Clashes
4.1 Disidentification
4.2 Disinvestment
4.3 Empowering Reversal
4.4 Backlighting
Part V
5.0 The Characteristics of Movements to Come
5.1 Who (and How) Was Occupy?
5.1a Who (And Which) are The People?
5.1b Topics and their Publics
5.2 After Victimhood, Beyond Innocence
5.2a After Victimhood
5.2b Beyond Innocence
5.3 Agency and Possibility in Defigurative Politics
5.3a Semiotic Transgression
Index