As capitalism triumphs on the ruins of utopias and faith in progress fades, revolts are breaking out everywhere. From London to Hong Kong and from Buenos Aires to Beirut, protests flare up, in some cases spreading like wildfire, in other cases petering out and reigniting elsewhere. Not even the pandemic has been able to stop them: as many were reflecting on the loss of public space, the fuse of a fresh explosion was lit in Minneapolis with the brutal murder of George Floyd. We are living in an age of revolt.
But what is revolt? It would be a mistake to think of it as simply an explosion of anger, a spontaneous and irrational outburst, as it is often portrayed in the media. Exploding anger is not a bolt from the blue but a symptom of a social order in which the sovereignty of the state has imposed itself as the sole condition of order. Revolt challenges the sovereignty of the state, whether it is democratic or despotic, exposing the violence that underpins it. Revolt upsets the agenda of power, interrupts time, throws history into disarray. The time of revolt, discontinuous and intermittent, is also a revolt of time, an anarchic transition to a space of time that disengages itself from the architecture of politics.
This brilliant reflection on the nature and significance of revolt will be of interest to students of politics and philosophy and to anyone concerned with the key questions of politics today.
Зміст
The Right to Breathe
The Constellation of Revolts
Between Politics and Police
Occupations: From the Factories to the Squares
Bella ciao: Notes of Resistance
A Spectral Era
In Search of the Lost Revolution
What Does Revolt Mean?
The Individual’s Cry – And the Wounds of History
Spartacus’s Day After Tomorrow
The Limits of Public Space
The Right to Appear
A Volte-Face on Power
Prefigurations
An Existential Tension
If Dissent is a Crime
The New Disobedients
Anonymous’s Grin
On Invisibility: A Show of Self-Concealment
Masks and Zones of Irresponsibility
Leaks
Resident Foreigners: The Anarchist Revolt
Barricades in Time
Bibliography
Notes
Про автора
Donatella Di Cesare is Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Sapienza University of Rome.