13 Theses on Feminist Protest: A Manifesto.

Autor: Alvarez, Sonia E., Balaguera, Martha, Bernal, Angélica María, Carvalho, Layla, Cerullo, Margaret, Doherty, Taylor Marie, de Fina Gonzalez, Débora, Henderson, Kevin, Orozco Mendoza, Elva F., Thayer, Millie
Zdroj: Signs: Journal of Women in Culture & Society; Autumn2024, Vol. 50 Issue 1, p11-42, 32p
Abstrakt: Antiracist, anticapitalist feminist protests are at the forefront of contemporary mass protest in the Americas and beyond. As an interdisciplinary, intergenerational, international collective of feminist activist-intellectuals, we have been engaging with and analyzing contemporary protest since the global uprisings of the 2010s. Few things are bigger in feminism today than mass protest, yet there has been scant theorizing about it. Our manifesto accounts for the ubiquity of feminist epistemologies and practices marking an epochal shift in activism around the world. It proceeds in three parts. First, we analyze the current moment as a feminist conjuncture. Second, we conceptualize contemporary feminist protest, which we maintain must be theorized in itself rather than subsumed within the study of feminist movements. Finally, we advance an agenda for a feminist theory of protest, concluding that as activist assemblages, protest processes rearrange the ever-more diverse components of feminist fields, creating informal, fluid, if sometimes ephemeral, rhizomatic, and recombinant collectivities, articulations, and agglomerations. Feminist and other popular protests produce new organizational forms and generate realignments in activist fields. We propose that today's generative forms of protest presage the future shape of what we have conventionally called "social movements." We thereby address what we believe are big and largely unexplored feminist questions about protest and movements that should inspire new directions in feminist and critical social theory for years to come. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index