Protest Movements and Citizen Discontent: Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party

2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 575-595 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Levi Martin ◽  
James P. Murphy ◽  
Rick Moore
Author(s):  
Agata Lisiak

The uprisings and protest movements of 2011 (the so-called Arab Spring, "indignados," Occupy Wall Street, etc.) have been widely considered groundbreaking because of their leaderless structures. Owing to the absence of unequivocally leading figures, the symbolic and practical role of urban space has been emphasized in popular media and scholarship alike. Next to the widely circulated and discussed images of Tahrir Square, Puerta del Sol, and Zucotti Park, however, another type of image has been prevalent, that of a revolutionary woman. In response to W.J.T. Mitchell's article "Image, Space, Revolution: The Arts of Occupation" (2012), the author argues that the reasons for the focus of recent revolutionary imagery on women cannot be reduced to the allegedly feminine character of nonviolence, but are much more complex and entail far-reaching consequences. Lisiak engages with two images Mitchell quotes as iconic of the 2011 revolutions – the ballerina from the Occupy Wall Street poster and the "blue bra girl" beaten and disrobed by the military police in Tahrir Square – and discuss their cultural and historical significance. These two images represent two major tropes prevalent in revolutionary iconography: woman as a symbol of revolutionary ideals and woman as a symbol of the failure of revolution. Further, the author proposes that revolutionary images centered on women, both real-life and fictional, belong to what Ariella Azoulay calls the "language of revolution".


2013 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jarret T. Crawford ◽  
Eneda Xhambazi

2020 ◽  
pp. 193-197
Author(s):  
Benjamin Ask Popp-Madsen

The conclusion summarises the main arguments of the book and relates the council tradition to contemporary protest movements such as Occupy Wall Street and Indignados. Although the council movements of the 20th century cannot be used as a blueprint for future protest and organisation, the council tradition and contemporary movements of Occupation share the ambitions of self-organisation, of pluralising the traditional spaces of politics, and of giving institutional form to the constituent power.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 265-288
Author(s):  
John L. Hammond

The medieval carnival, according to Russian literary scholar Mikhail Bakhtin, was a public festivity of excess in which people were free to violate social norms and subvert prevailing authority. Recent analysts have applied Bakhtin’s concept of carnival to contemporary political protests that incorporate a playful, culture-defying element. But the term has been used in multiple and contradictory ways. For Bakhtin, carnival is an expressive pattern pervasive in a culture and has no instrumental purpose (what I call “communal carnival”), while carnivalesque protest consists of specific practices with an explicit political agenda (“intentional carnival”). The Occupy Wall Street movement can be analyzed as both communal and intentional carnival. Protest movements use humor to subvert received doctrines; humorous performances are addressed to participants, the public, and repressive forces. Some critics regard carnivalesque performances as frivolous and demeaning of serious political causes. I conclude by discussing the effect of carnival on the Occupy movement.


2019 ◽  
pp. 133-162
Author(s):  
Christopher Martin

Chapter 5 exploresthe idea of political voice. It charts how the shift in journalism’s positions about labor unions and the working class relates to the shift in focus of the Democrat and Republican parties in the late 1960s and early 1970s and the concept of the “Silent Majority” encouraged by the Republican Party. As the media and politicians talked less about class, and the working class lost their voice,they found it again in the nascent Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street movements, which had similar origins, but wildly divergent solutions. The chapter also looks at the case of Iowa’s shift in political voice in the 2016 presidential election.


2014 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 326-341 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheetal D. Agarwal ◽  
Michael L. Barthel ◽  
Caterina Rost ◽  
Alan Borning ◽  
W. Lance Bennett ◽  
...  

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