The Locator -- [(title = "Resistance ")]

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Author:
Olson, Alix, author.
Title:
The ends of resistance : making and unmaking democracy / Alix Olson and Alex Zamalin.
Publisher:
Columbia University Press,
Copyright Date:
2024
Description:
viii, 189 pages ; 23 cm
Subject:
Political participation--United States--History--21st century.
Government, Resistance to--United States.
Social movements--Political aspects--United States--Case studies.
United States--Politics and government.
Participation politique--Etats-Unis--Histoire--21e siecle.
Resistance au gouvernement--Etats-Unis.
Mouvements sociaux--Aspect politique--Etats-Unis--Etudes de cas.
Etats-Unis--Politique et gouvernement.
Government, Resistance to
Political participation
Politics and government
Social movements--Political aspects
United States
2000-2099
Case studies
History
Other Authors:
Zamalin, Alex, 1986- author.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
The end of resistance: Reformation over transformation -- Neoliberal resistance -- Democracy domesticated: Resistance as restoration -- Making suspicious citizens: Racializing and criminalizing resistance -- Unruly world-building: Toward a critical infrastructure of demanding hope.
Summary:
"In the wake of ten years of police murders of Black people, including Michael Brown, George Floyd, and Breonna Taylor; massacres of women by incels like Elliot Rodger; anti-LGBTQ mass murders like Colorado Springs; and numerous white-supremacist activities during Trump's presidency, including Unite the Right, a number of progressive movements and actions, from the Women's March on Washington to #MeToo and most significantly Black Lives Matter, encouraged some to see in Biden's 2020 election signs of a triumphant success. But for many on the Left what is unfolding, exemplified by the ruling elite's cooptation of protest, is the evisceration of the radical potential of resistance, a continuation of the status quo since the aftermath of the 1960s. Resistance has been personalized and emptied of its revolutionary critique of socioeconomic domination, a consequence of neoliberalism; it has been defined as political protest and dissent rather than as the work of a life to overthrow existing institutions; and finally it has been criminalized, subsumed under the rubric of national security. Resistance has been replaced by resilience, the ability to adapt to and benefit from adversity. Given its long history of disappointments, can there be a form of resistance that works? What would it look like? Alix Olson and Alex Zamalin argue that, if resistance is to be successful in the struggle against neoliberal racial capitalism, it must take the form of what they call "unruly world-building," which already exists in movements such as BLM, Extinction Rebellion, and Standing Rock. Often leaderless or led by young people from marginalized groups, they articulate a refusal to be defined by a "politics of maturity"; they reject realism, pragmatism, compromise. They aim not to reform but to overturn the capitalist state. These movements break norms; their members think beyond personal freedom toward living collectively and in solidarity with one another and with the planet. Learning from and nourishing them are our only means of talking seriously about the future"-- Provided by publisher.
ISBN:
023120499X
9780231204996
0231204981
9780231204989
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1391135426
LCCN:
2023027866
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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