scholarly journals The aesthetics of political resistance: On silent politics

Thesis Eleven ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 072551362110351
Author(s):  
Katariina Kaura-aho

This article analyses the aesthetics of silent political resistance by focusing on refugees’ silent political action. The starting point for the analysis is Jacques Rancière’s philosophy and his theorisation of the aesthetics of politics. The article enquires into the aesthetic meaning of silent refugee activism and interprets how refugees’ silent acts of resistance can constitute aesthetically effective resistance to what can be called the ‘speech system’ of statist, representative democracy. The article analyses silence as a political tactic and interprets the emancipatory meaning of silent politics for refugees. It argues that refugees’ silent acts of political resistance can powerfully affect aesthetic, political subversion in prevailing legal-political contexts.

1972 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edmund Burke

This article marks a beginning at tracing the links between Near Eastern and African Islamic resistance, through an analysis of the ways in which Pan-Islamic agents from Egypt sought to intervene in support of indigenous Moroccan efforts to resist French imperialism during the period 1900 to 1912. The first section explores the general patterns of Pan-Islamic ideology and political action, and places the study of Pan-Islam in the context of studies of African resistance to imperialism. Succeeding sections review Moroccan relations with the Near East, trace the stages of growing Near Eastern involvement in support of Moroccan resistance, which culminated in an abortive general rising in 1912, and assess the strengths and weaknesses of Pan-Islam as a transitional movement of political resistance to imperialism.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farhan Ali ◽  

Thinking creatively, is a necessary condition of the Design process to transform ideas into novel solutions and break barriers to creativity. Although, there are many techniques and ways to stimulate creative thinking for designers, however, this research paper adopts SCAMPER; which is acronym of: Substitute- Combine-Adapt- Modify or Magnify-Put to another use-Eliminate-Reverse or Rearrange- to integrate the sustainability concepts within architectural design process. Many creative artifacts have been designed consciously or unconsciously adopting SCAMPER strategies such as rehabilitation and reuse projects to improve the functional performance or the aesthetic sense of an existing building for the better. SCAMPER is recognized as a divergent thinking tool are used during the initial ideation stage, aims to leave the usual way of thinking to generate a wide range of new ideas that will lead to new insights, original ideas, and creative solutions to problems. The research focuses on applying this method in the architectural design, which is rarely researched, through reviewing seven examples that have been designed consciously or unconsciously adopting SCAMPER mnemonic techniques. The paper aims to establish a starting point for further research to deepen it and study its potentials in solving architectural design problems.


2016 ◽  
Vol 136 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-95
Author(s):  
André Lepecki

This essay analyzes the approach of Brazilian artist Hélio Oiticica (1937–80) to what he called “the problem of color.” Oiticica’s conceptual-aesthetic pursuits between 1959–65 offered a renewed onto-political conceptualization of notions of time, particularly of the “liveness” of inert matters and of the “thingness” of participation. His notion of “vivência estética” (the lived experience of the aesthetic) bridged supposed gaps between performance and objecthood while offering a redefinition of what constitutes political action and what constitutes artistic matter.


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Robalinho

Resumo: Em junho de 2013 as ruas do Brasil foram tomadas por manifestantes. Se os protestos surpreendem e desestabilizam a realidade social com novas formas de ação política, esses processos tomam corpo através de uma relação contígua e simultânea com as imagens. Como podemos olhar para a relação liminar entre a multidão nas ruas e as telas para acessar a produção política e subjetiva de junho de 2013? Benjamin propõe um olhar sobre a história que não seja descritivo, linear e triunfalista, mas lacunar, sintomático, disruptivo, intensificado e capaz de atualizar as forças políticas no presente. Mais do que olhar o passado, Benjamin deseja intervir no presente. É a partir dessa provocação que olhamos as imagens de junho de 2013, mais especificamente para uma série de planos sequência que foram produzidos durante a noite de 17 de julho de 2013 quando o Bairro do Leblon foi tomado por manifestantes e barricadas em chamas. Porque o plano sequência e de que forma esta unidade de linguagem cinematográfica incorpora uma experiência das ruas insurgentes?Palavras-chaves: junho de 2013; imagem; história; produção política; produção subjetiva; plano sequência.Abstract: In June 2013 Brazilian streets were overtaken by protests. If new forms of political action capable of disrupting social reality were invented, this process was lived through a contiguous and simultaneous relation with images. How can we access June’s 2013 political and subjective production through the liminal relation between its images and the crowd on the streets? Benjamin proposes an approach to history that is not explanatory, linear and triumphant, on the contrary is fragmented, symptomatic, disruptive, intensified and able to bring forth political forces in the present. More than looking at the past, Benjamin desires to intervene in the present. This is a starting point to look at June 2013 images, more specifically, to a series of long shots that were produced in 2013 during the night of the 17 of July when the posh neighborhood of Leblon was overwhelmed by protesters and blazing barricades. Why the use of long shots and how does this unity of cinematic discourse express an experience of the insurgent streets?Keywords: June 2013; image; history; political production; subjective production; long shot.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 112
Author(s):  
Manuel Kingman

ResumenEl presente artículo referencia teorías sobre la cultura popular ubicadas en las décadas del 80 y el 90 del siglo pasado, un período de reflexión pertinente y profunda en torno al término. Se visibiliza la complejidad de la noción de cultura popular, así como las distintas significaciones y sentidos que ha tenido el concepto. También se estudian ciertas entradas teóricas que son útiles para analizar la cultura popular. Se piensa en estos insumos teóricos como herramientas para reflexionar sobre las representaciones, diálogos y tensiones entre el arte contemporáneo y las manifestaciones estéticas populares.Palabras clavesCultura popular; arte contemporáneo; teoría cultural; antropologíaWork, Dialogue, Occupation and Cooperativism at Casa TomadaVictoria Rodríguez do CampoAbstractThe interdisciplinary art project Casa Tomada operates as a trigger for addressing issues of the social and artistic contemporary juncture. The fiction created by the National House of the Bicentennial, cultural space of the City of Buenos Aires, opens the way to consider alternative forms of creation in which the status of the artist's work is put in check and renewed interstices are glimpsed through the action of the multiple actors that surround the project. With illegal political action as a starting point – the forced occupation of a public space, Casa Tomada is committed to showing a multiplicity of conflicts, tensions, questions as well as possible answers, which are always contingent and applicable both to the social and the artistic spheres.KeywordsContemporary art; occupation, politics; collective work; interdisciplinarity La noción de lectura popular  interés debatekunape entre 80 y 90 siglo XX iuiarengapa contemporaniedadmandaManuel kiingman Maillallachiska:Kai articulok referenciame teoriakuna cultura kaska decadape posagchunga y  iskun chunga ialiska siglomanda, sug suma iuiarei entorno  terminomanda. Kauarenme complejidad nocionpe cultura popularpe chasallata sug rigcha significación y sentido iukarka chi concepto. Chasallata analizare sug entradakuna  teóricas valenkuna analizangapa cultura popular. Iuairenme  kai insumo teóricos herramientasina iuiarengapa representacionkunamanda, rimai tensiones arte contemporaneanope y manifestación estéticas populares. Rimangapa Ministidukuna:Cultura popular; arte contemporáneo; teoría cultural; antropologíaLa notion de culture populaire : intérêts des débats entre les années 80 et 90 du XXe siècle pour réfléchir sur la contemporanéitéManuel KingmanRésuméCet article se réfère à des théories sur la culture populaire dans les années 80 et 90 du siècle dernier, une période de réflexion pertinente et profonde sur le terme. Il présente la complexité de la notion de culture populaire, ainsi que les différentes significations et usage du concept. Il étudie également certains éléments théoriques utiles à l'analyse de la culture populaire. Nous pensons à ces apports théoriques comme outils pour réfléchir sur les représentations, les dialogues et les tensions entre l'art contemporain et les manifestations esthétiques populaires.Mots clésCulture populaire; art contemporain; théorie culturelle; anthropologie


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 333
Author(s):  
Komang Agus Sawitri ◽  
Ni Wayan Sumertini ◽  
I Made Wika

<p><em>Gambuh Dance in Pakraman Padangaji Village is interesting to be studied because it has unique and Hindu aesthetic value on the motion, clothing and makeup that is displayed. Dance Gambuh in Padangaji its appearance almost simultaneously with the establishment of the Village. Gambuh dance performance form is divided into Pategak, Paigelan, and Panyuud. The function of dance performances Gambuh include religious functions, social community, cultural preservation, entertainment, and safety. The aesthetic meaning of Hindu dance Gambuh contained elements of Satyam, Siwam, and Sundaram which can be seen from the dress, makeup and displayed. The conclusion of this research is that there are form, function and meaning in Gambuh dance performance in Desa Pakraman Padangaji.</em></p><p><em> </em></p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 228-239
Author(s):  
Katja Frimberger

The article explores the role of a Brechtian theater pedagogy as “philosophical ethnography” in four investigative drama-based workshops, which took international students’ intercultural “strangeness” experiences as the starting point for aesthetic experimentation. It is argued that a Brechtian theater pedagogy allows for a productive rather than representational orientation in research, which is underpinned by a love for the aesthetic “re-entanglement” of (dis-embodied) language and ethical concerns about mimetic representational acts. To show how a Brechtian research pedagogy functioned as philosophical ethnography, the article maps the aesthetic transformation of participant Jamal’s verbatim account in the drama workshops—from (a) its emergence in a post-creative-writing discussion in Workshop 2, to (b) its enactment as a body sculpture in Workshop 3, and (c) to its translation into a rehearsal piece in Workshop 4.


Author(s):  
Michael Bruter ◽  
Sarah Harrison

This chapter develops a model of electoral identity. The starting point is that virtually all electoral science is based on a silent assumption: that the vote is a direct translation of electoral preference. This corresponds to an intrinsic tenet of representative democracy, the idea that elections are intended to aggregate citizens' preferences, which representative institutions will thereby reflect. There is, however, nothing to suggest that those original intentions are necessarily confirmed by how citizens behave in elections. The chapter therefore asks a question which has the potential to invalidate the single most important premise of electoral research: what if citizens do not go to the polling booth to register a raw preference, but instead inhabit a certain role when they go to vote? It hypothesizes that the vote is not a straightforward measure of spontaneous preference, but that instead, citizens' behaviour is shaped by how they perceive the function of elections, and in turn their role as voters. Using the analogy of sports events, whereby parties and candidates represent the competing teams, the chapter identifies two key alternative perceptions of the role of voters: ‘referees’ and ‘supporters’.


1972 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 88-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. K. Elliott

In this paper I shall not be concerned with the imagination as insight, but only with certain aspects of ‘magical’ imagination, that division of the concept which centres upon the notion of an image. In the Philosophical Investigations (II xi) Wittgenstein makes the extremely interesting remark that when a printed triangle is seen, for instance, as a mountain, it is as if an image came into contact, and for a time remained in contact, with the visual impression (i.e. with the object as seen by me). He goes on to say that in a picture a triangular figure may have some such aspect permanently — in the pictorial context we would read the figure at once as a mountain — but that we can make a distinction between ‘regarding’ and ‘seeing’ the figure as the thing meant. I take him to be contrasting those common experiences in which we see a figure in a picture as depicting a person, or as a ‘picture-person’, with those rarer experiences, referred to by art-critics when they talk of ‘presence’, in which it seems as if the person depicted in the picture is there before us ‘in the flesh’, and I assume that, like Sartre, Wittgenstein would suppose that imagination plays a part in experiences of this latter kind. In this paper I shall be concerned not with this sense of the presence of the object depicted, but chiefly with types of imaginal experience in which the image which seems to come into contact with what is perceived is an image of something which is not depicted or described in the work, but which nevertheless achieves a certain strength of presence. I shall consider, also, some types of imaginal experience which we would not naturally describe as an image's coming into contact with what is perceived. Though I shall relate some of the examples I discuss to my starting-point in Wittgenstein, I do not claim to be elaborating Wittgenstein's remark in a manner which would have been acceptable to him. My aims are to give some indication of the nature and scope of the imaginal experience of art, to defend the aesthetic relevance of this type of experience, and to suggest why the imaginal experience of art has been, and still is, valued.


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