Cultural Anthropology of the Occupy Movement
* Special issue, i.e. 'Hotspot' of Cultural Anthropology (journal). Occupy, Anthropology, and the 2011 Global Uprisings. Guest edited by Jeffrey S. Juris and Maple Razsa.
URL = http://culanth.org/?q=node/641
Contents
- Jeffrey S. Juris and Maple Razsa, Introduction: Occupy, Anthropology, and the 2011 Global Uprisings [1]
Prefigurative Politics
Marianne Maeckelbergh, Horizontal Decision-Making across Time and Place [2]
Chris Garces, People’s Mic and “Leaderful” Charisma [3]
Philip Cartelli, Trying to Occupy Harvard
Public Space
Zoltan Gluck, Between Wall Street and Zuccotti: Occupy and the Scale of Politics [4]
Carles Feixa, et al., The #spanishrevolution and Beyond [5]
Dimitris Dalakoglou, The Movement and the "Movement" of Syntagma Square [6]
Experience and Subjectivity
Jeffrey S. Juris, The 99% and the Production of Insurgent Subjectivity [7]
Diane Nelson, et al., Her earliest leaf’s a flower…
Maple Razsa, The Subjective Turn: The Radicalization of Personal Experience within Occupy Slovenia [8][
Marina Sitrin, Occupy Trust: The Role of Emotion in the New Movements [9]
Strategy and Tactics
David Graeber, Occupy Wall Street rediscovers the radical imagination [10]
Kate Griffiths-Dingani, May Day, Precarity, Affective Labor, and the General Strike
Angelique Haugerud, Humor and Occupy Wall Street
Karen Ho, Occupy Finance and the Paradox/Possibilities of Productivity [11]
Social Media
Alice Mattoni, Beyond Celebration: Toward a More Nuanced Assessment of Facebook’s Role in Occupy Wall Street [12]
John Postill, Participatory Media Research and Spain’s 15M Movement [13]
Critical Perspectives
Yvonne Yen Liu, Decolonizing the Occupy Movement
Manissa McCleave Maharawal, Fieldnotes on Union Square, Anti-Oppression, and Occupy
Uri Gordon, Israel’s “Tent Protests”: A Domesticated Mobilization [14]
Alex Khasnabish, Occupy Nova Scotia: The Symbolism and Politics of Space