Protest camps in international context : spaces, infrastructures and media of resistance /: spaces, infrastructures and media of resistance. (2017)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Protest camps in international context : spaces, infrastructures and media of resistance /: spaces, infrastructures and media of resistance. (2017)
- Main Title:
- Protest camps in international context : spaces, infrastructures and media of resistance
- Further Information:
- Note: Edited by Gavin Brown, Anna Feigenbaum, Fabian Frenzel and Patrick Mccurdy.
- Editors:
- (Lecturer in Human Geography), Brown, Gavin
Feigenbaum, Anna
Frenzel, Fabian, 1975-
McCurdy, Patrick, 1975- - Contents:
- Intro -- PROTEST CAMPS IN INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT -- Contents -- List of figures -- Notes on contributors -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Introduction: past tents, present tents: on the importance of studying protest camps -- Present tents: Protest camps in the contemporary world -- Past tents: protest camps in historical perspective -- Conceptual frameworks for thinking about protest camps -- Aims and structure of the book -- Introduction to the book's themes -- Part One. Assembling and materialising -- 2. Introduction: assembling and materialising -- Introduction -- Tent monsters -- The chapters of Part One -- 3. Textile geographies, plasticity as protest -- Introduction -- Textile as protection -- Extension of bodies, body geography -- Textile, city, landscape and camp -- Textile as politics -- Plasticity politics -- 4. Emergent infrastructures: solidarity, spontaneity and encounter at Istanbul's Gezi Park uprising -- Introduction -- From a tree to an uprising: a short overview -- Emergence of the protest camp in Gezi Park -- Gezi Park and not Taksim Square -- Spontaneous and heterogeneous: Gezi Park as an open and inclusive political space -- Radical infrastructures -- Conclusion -- 5. Protest spaces online and offline: the Indignant movement in Syntagma Square -- Introduction -- Defining space -- Space and contentious politics -- The Indignant movement in Syntagma Square -- Upper and Lower Square: the Dionysian and the Apollonian -- Syntagma Square as a centre of mediation andIntro -- PROTEST CAMPS IN INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT -- Contents -- List of figures -- Notes on contributors -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Introduction: past tents, present tents: on the importance of studying protest camps -- Present tents: Protest camps in the contemporary world -- Past tents: protest camps in historical perspective -- Conceptual frameworks for thinking about protest camps -- Aims and structure of the book -- Introduction to the book's themes -- Part One. Assembling and materialising -- 2. Introduction: assembling and materialising -- Introduction -- Tent monsters -- The chapters of Part One -- 3. Textile geographies, plasticity as protest -- Introduction -- Textile as protection -- Extension of bodies, body geography -- Textile, city, landscape and camp -- Textile as politics -- Plasticity politics -- 4. Emergent infrastructures: solidarity, spontaneity and encounter at Istanbul's Gezi Park uprising -- Introduction -- From a tree to an uprising: a short overview -- Emergence of the protest camp in Gezi Park -- Gezi Park and not Taksim Square -- Spontaneous and heterogeneous: Gezi Park as an open and inclusive political space -- Radical infrastructures -- Conclusion -- 5. Protest spaces online and offline: the Indignant movement in Syntagma Square -- Introduction -- Defining space -- Space and contentious politics -- The Indignant movement in Syntagma Square -- Upper and Lower Square: the Dionysian and the Apollonian -- Syntagma Square as a centre of mediation and contentious activity -- Conclusion -- 6. Feeds from the square: live streaming, live tweeting and the self-representation of protest camps -- Introduction -- Protest camps between location and mediation -- Methodology -- The meaning of live feeds -- Live feeds in the Indignados and Occupy Wall Street -- Please do post me: live feeds and the new culture of transparency. Feeds for our 'closet supporters' -- The activist self-representation of protest space -- 7.Touching a nerve: a discussion on Hong Kong's Umbrella Movement -- Introduction -- Background -- Producing protest -- (Re)presenting the movement -- (Re)constructing everyday life in protest camps -- Embracing dissent -- Communications and conflicts -- Concluding remarks -- Part Two. Occupying and colonising -- 8. Introduction: occupying and colonising -- Introduction -- Ways of occupying -- Overview of the chapters -- 9. Carry on camping? The British Camp for Climate Action as a political refrain -- Introduction -- Situating the climate camps -- Political tensions -- Camping as a political refrain -- Conclusion: metamorphosis? -- 10. Losing space in Occupy London: fetishising the protest camp -- Introduction -- Form, fetishism and institutionalisation -- Occupy London and the tactic of the protest camp -- Fetishising the protest camp -- Conclusion: the antagonistic form of the protest camp -- 11. Occupation, decolonisation and reciprocal violence, or history responds to Occupy's anti-colonial critics1 -- The wish -- The anti-colonial critique -- The occupation of Columbia University -- The occupation of Alcatraz -- Implications -- 12. Reoccupation and resurgence: indigenous protest camps in Canada -- Introduction: a history of blockades -- Twenty-five years of reoccupations -- Resistance, resurgence, relationships: Indigenous reoccupations in action -- Activists and solidarity -- Conclusion: reflections on responsibility -- 13. Democratic deficit in the Israeli Tent Protests: chronicle of a failed intervention -- Introduction -- Mobilisation and early tensions -- Diving in -- Analysis: the failure of formal structures. 14. Euromaidan and the echoes of the Orange Revolution: comparing social infrastructures and resistance practices of protest camps in Kiev (Ukraine) -- Introduction -- Appropriation of space, spatial practices and social transformations -- Representation of space: why Maidan? -- Analysing spatial practices: Orange Maidan versus Euromaidan -- New decision-making and resistance practices -- Conclusion -- 15. Civil/political society, protest and fasting: the case of Anna Hazare and the 2011 anti-corruption campaign in India -- Introduction -- The Jan Lokpal campaign and Anna Hazare's August 2011 fast -- Situating Anna Hazare's fast as political practice -- The camp and civil society -- Conclusions -- Part Three. Reproducing and re-creating -- 16. Introduction: reproducing and re-creating -- Introduction -- A politics of social reproduction -- Chapters in Part Three -- 17. From 'refugee population' to political community: the Mustapha Mahmoud refugee protest camp -- Introduction -- The Sudanese diaspora and the refugee question in Egypt -- The protest camp location: contesting humanitarian space, forging solidarities -- Infrastructures of care beyond humanitarianism -- The camp's violent eviction and the legacy of the Mustapha Mahmoud protests -- Conclusions -- 18. The Marconi occupation in São Paulo, Brazil: a social laboratory of common life -- Introduction -- Right to the city: squatter and occupy movements in Brazil -- Marconi occupation as an urban protest camp -- Conclusion -- 19. From protest camp to tent city: the 'Free Cuvry' camp in Berlin-Kreuzberg -- Introduction -- Methods -- Protest camps between political action and social reproduction -- Life and politics in Kreuzberg -- Free Cuvry's emergence -- Making ends meet -- The Monday plenary -- The eviction -- Conclusion. 20. Security is no accident: considering safe(r) spaces in the transnational Migrant Solidarity camps of Calais1 -- Introduction -- Methodology -- Safer spaces policies -- Calais Migrant Solidarity and No Border camps -- Reflections on safety and space at the Calais No Border Camp -- Problematising the 'Feminist Security Group' and white women as bearers of morality -- Four considerations for safer spaces and migrant solidarity projects -- Conclusion -- 21. Political education in protest camps: spatialising dissensus and reconfiguring places of youth activist ritual in Mexico City -- Introduction -- Placing activism, cultivating spaces of politics -- Protest camps as sites of learning -- Protest camps as sites at which lifecourses are given shape -- Protest camps as sites in which to generate solidarity -- Conclusion -- Part Four. Conclusion -- 22. Future tents: protest camps and social movement organisation -- Introduction -- Diversity and locality -- Travelling infrastructures -- Critical reflections on the protest camp form -- Trajectories for future research -- Conclusion -- Index. … (more)
- Publisher Details:
- Bristol, UK : Policy Press
- Publication Date:
- 2017
- Copyright Date:
- 2017
- Extent:
- 1 online resource (xviii, 410 pages)
- Subjects:
- 303.484
Protest camps
Protest movements -- Social aspects
Demonstrations -- Social aspects
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- General
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Human Rights
Demonstrations
Protest movements
Politischer Protest
Protestbewegung
Zeltlager
Soziale Bewegung
Electronic books - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781447329435
1447329430
9781447329442
1447329449
9781447329459
1447329457
9781447329473
1447329473 - Related ISBNs:
- 1447329414
9781447329411 - Notes:
- Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Note: Online resource; title from PDF title page (Jstor, viewed June 13, 2018). - Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
- Access Usage:
- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
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- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.123760
- Ingest File:
- 02_006.xml