Description

Book Synopsis
The Tunisian revolution raises important questions regarding the articulation of resistance and political subjectivity in the context of global governmentality. By drawing from political theory, philosophy, ethnography and readings of local street art, this book restores the radical significance of the political event as an instance of possible collective action.

Using the 2011 Tunisian revolution as a starting point for a broader discussion, this book analyses the processes of Orientalisation of non-Western examples of collective action and critiquing the narrative frame of the ‘Arab Spring’. By focusing on the aspect of autonomous mobilities and transformations, occurred within a beyond the Tunisian space, Oana Pârvan is able answer key questions including, how moments of political rupture (such as revolutions) are interpreted by the wider public and how mobility across the Mediterranean rearticulates the distribution and recomposition of political theory categories such as class. She narrates how the Tunisian revolution can be inscribed into a long history of dispossession (colonial, regional, neoliberal) and resistance; and the culture and practices of the Tunisian revolutionaries have spread in the country and abroad (seen as a way to think beyond the methodological framework of the nation-state).

This work builds on research fieldwork and the analysis of Tunisian street art (mostly of the Ahl Al Kahf collective), drawing from migration-centred ethnographic work in order to suggest a reconstruction of the event. By applying theoretical reflections inspired by continental philosophy, media theory and autonomy of migration theory, this work develops an event-based theoretical reflection able to contribute towards rethinking contemporary Orientalism, self-representation and political subjectivity.

Table of Contents
Preface

Introduction

1. The ‘Arab Spring’: The Projection of a ‘Familiar’ Revolution

2. The Event of Resistance and Its Capture

3. A Microhistory of the Tunisian Revolution. The Struggle of the Disenfranchised

4. Histories of Dispossession and Contemporary Vanguards

5. Mediation of An Event. Circulation of Cultures and Practices of Resistance

Conclusion

Index

The Arab Spring Between Transformation and

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    A Hardback by Oana Pârvan

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      View other formats and editions of The Arab Spring Between Transformation and by Oana Pârvan

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield International
      Publication Date: 29/09/2020
      ISBN13: 9781786614766, 978-1786614766
      ISBN10: 1786614766

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Tunisian revolution raises important questions regarding the articulation of resistance and political subjectivity in the context of global governmentality. By drawing from political theory, philosophy, ethnography and readings of local street art, this book restores the radical significance of the political event as an instance of possible collective action.

      Using the 2011 Tunisian revolution as a starting point for a broader discussion, this book analyses the processes of Orientalisation of non-Western examples of collective action and critiquing the narrative frame of the ‘Arab Spring’. By focusing on the aspect of autonomous mobilities and transformations, occurred within a beyond the Tunisian space, Oana Pârvan is able answer key questions including, how moments of political rupture (such as revolutions) are interpreted by the wider public and how mobility across the Mediterranean rearticulates the distribution and recomposition of political theory categories such as class. She narrates how the Tunisian revolution can be inscribed into a long history of dispossession (colonial, regional, neoliberal) and resistance; and the culture and practices of the Tunisian revolutionaries have spread in the country and abroad (seen as a way to think beyond the methodological framework of the nation-state).

      This work builds on research fieldwork and the analysis of Tunisian street art (mostly of the Ahl Al Kahf collective), drawing from migration-centred ethnographic work in order to suggest a reconstruction of the event. By applying theoretical reflections inspired by continental philosophy, media theory and autonomy of migration theory, this work develops an event-based theoretical reflection able to contribute towards rethinking contemporary Orientalism, self-representation and political subjectivity.

      Table of Contents
      Preface

      Introduction

      1. The ‘Arab Spring’: The Projection of a ‘Familiar’ Revolution

      2. The Event of Resistance and Its Capture

      3. A Microhistory of the Tunisian Revolution. The Struggle of the Disenfranchised

      4. Histories of Dispossession and Contemporary Vanguards

      5. Mediation of An Event. Circulation of Cultures and Practices of Resistance

      Conclusion

      Index

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