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Abstract
Resistance has often been connected with anti-social attitudes, destructiveness, reactionary or revolutionary ideologies, unusual and sudden explosions of violence and emotional outbursts. This book goes beyond these conventions.
Exploring various key questions, ranging from concept definitions of affect and temporality, to complex entanglements of various social dimensions and ethical questions, this accessible guide provides a robust theoretical and methodological framework for researching of resistance and social change.
By drawing connections between resistance and politics, between performance and everyday strategies, and between the juridical and its counter-strategies, this book provides students with a transdisciplinary understanding of contemporary debates in this emerging field.
Mikael Baaz is Associate Professor in Peace and Conflict Studies and a Senior Lecturer in
International Law at the School of Business, Economics and Law, the University of
Gothenburg.
Mona Lilja is a Professor in Sociology at Karlstad University.
Stellan Vinthagen is Endowed Chair in the Study of Nonviolent Direct Action and Civil
Resistance and Professor of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Amherst.
This is an important book that fills a needed ‘hole’ in our understandings of power and resistance. One of its strengths is the consistent focus on how resistance itself is productive of further resistance…. I would recommend it to advanced undergraduate classes in globalization because often those classes only tell students about the oppressive and destructive aspects of global power relations; students come out of those classes depressed and cynical. This book is a needed corrective. Upper division political science and sociology classes on social change could use this book as required reading.
Kathy Ferguson, Department of Political Science, University of Hawai'i
In an era of new authoritarianism and popular resistance it is hardly possible for this text to be timelier. Long overdue, this well-crafted text provides some coherence, most importantly a sophisticated theoretical integrity and congruity, to the (rather) far-flung field of what might be fruitfully understood as resistance studies. Indispensable, invigorating, and inspirational, this ambitious and engaging work limns out a field in progress, opening up a critical conversation about where we are going and how. At a time and place where ‘resistance’ is bandied about with ample recognition but little attention to detail, this is a vital project.
Eric Selbin, Professor of Political Science and Holder of the Lucy King Brown Chair, Southwestern University
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover | Cover | ||
Researching Resistance and Social Change | i | ||
Researching Resistance and Social Change | iii | ||
Contents | vii | ||
Preface | ix | ||
Acknowledgements | xi | ||
Chapter 1 | 1 | ||
Chapter 2 | 19 | ||
Defining and Analysing ‘Resistance’ | 19 | ||
INTRODUCTION | 19 | ||
DIFFERENT UNDERSTANDINGS OF ‘RESISTANCE’ | 20 | ||
POSSIBLE ENTRANCES TO UNDERSTAND RESISTANCE | 27 | ||
CONCLUDING REMARKS | 33 | ||
NOTES | 34 | ||
REFERENCES | 34 | ||
Chapter 3 | 39 | ||
Sovereign Power, Disciplinary Power and Biopower | 39 | ||
INTRODUCTION | 39 | ||
FOUCAULT AND THE CONCEPT OF POWER: DISCIPLINARY POWER, SOVEREIGN POWER AND BIOPOWER | 40 | ||
OUTLINING RESISTANCE | 44 | ||
Resistance to Sovereign Power | 45 | ||
Resistance to Disciplinary Power | 47 | ||
Resistance to Biopower | 53 | ||
CONCLUDING REMARKS | 57 | ||
NOTES | 59 | ||
REFERENCES | 59 | ||
Chapter 4 | 63 | ||
How Resistance Encourages Resistance | 63 | ||
INTRODUCTION | 63 | ||
PREVIOUS RESEARCH ON ‘ORGANIZED RESISTANCE’ AND ‘EVERYDAY RESISTANCE’ | 65 | ||
RESISTANCE, RELATIONS OF SUBORDINATION AND SELF-REFLEXIVITY | 68 | ||
HOW ORGANIZED RESISTANCE ENCOURAGES EVERYDAY RESISTANCE: TWO EXAMPLES FROM CAMBODIA | 71 | ||
Local Civil-Society-Based Resistance against Violent Masculinities in Cambodia | 72 | ||
Constructing ‘Forced Marriage’ in Cambodia | 73 | ||
CONCLUDING REMARKS | 76 | ||
NOTE | 77 | ||
REFERENCES | 78 | ||
Chapter 5 | 81 | ||
How Resistance Encourages Power | 81 | ||
INTRODUCTION | 81 | ||
RATIONALITY AND IRRATIONALITY: SOME THEORETICAL NOTIONS | 83 | ||
RESISTING WHAT? SOME THEORETICAL NOTIONS OF POWER | 88 | ||
UNDERSTANDING RESISTANCE | 89 | ||
RESISTANCE AS BOTH RATIONAL AND IRRATIONAL | 90 | ||
CONCLUDING REMARKS | 94 | ||
REFERENCES | 95 | ||
Chapter 6 | 99 | ||
Entanglements of Everyday Resistance, Organized Resistance and Violence | 99 | ||
INTRODUCTION | 99 | ||
DATA COLLECTION, INTERVIEWS AND APPROACHING THE VISIBLE | 100 | ||
PREVIOUS RESEARCH: FORMS OF VIOLENCE | 101 | ||
FORMS OF RESISTANCE | 104 | ||
EMOTIONS AND RESISTANCE | 104 | ||
ENTANGLEMENTS OF RESISTANCE AND VIOLENCE AS AN ENGINE FOR SOCIAL CHANGE IN CAMBODIA | 106 | ||
CONCLUDING REMARKS | 113 | ||
REFERENCES | 114 | ||
Chapter 7 | 119 | ||
Fighting with and against the Time | 119 | ||
INTRODUCTION | 119 | ||
METHOD AND MATERIALS | 121 | ||
CIVIL SOCIETY AND TEMPORALITY: PREVIOUS RESEARCH | 122 | ||
QUEER TEMPORALITIES, TEMPORALITIES, AND TIME-SPACE | 124 | ||
AFFECTS AND THE POLITICS OF RESISTANCE | 126 | ||
CHANGING TEMPORALITIES AS A MEANS OF RESISTANCE | 128 | ||
CONCLUDING REMARKS | 134 | ||
REFERENCES | 135 | ||
Chapter 8 | 139 | ||
Moral Compulsions, Everyday Resistance and Ethical Research | 139 | ||
INTRODUCTION | 139 | ||
THE ETHICAL CHALLENGES OF RESISTANCE STUDIES | 144 | ||
Knowledge/Power | 146 | ||
Power/Resistance | 148 | ||
Identifying, Analysing and Abstracting New Public Knowledge | 149 | ||
Revealing and Exposing Hidden Forms of Resistance | 152 | ||
Ethical Challenges of Doing Research through Resistance as a Method | 154 | ||
POSSIBILITIES OF ETHICAL RESISTANCE STUDIES | 155 | ||
TOWARDS ETHICAL GUIDELINES FOR RESEARCHING RESISTANCE | 158 | ||
CONCLUDING REMARKS | 160 | ||
NOTES | 162 | ||
REFERENCES | 163 | ||
Chapter 9 | 165 | ||
Some Ethical Aspects of the ‘Strategy of Legal Rupture’ as Resistance | 165 | ||
INTRODUCTION | 165 | ||
THE STRATEGY OF LEGAL RUPTURE | 166 | ||
THE KLAUS BARBIE TRIAL | 171 | ||
CODE(S) OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT, OBJECTIVE(S) OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AND THE STRATEGY OF LEGAL RUPTURE | 179 | ||
CONCLUDING REMARKS | 185 | ||
NOTE | 189 | ||
REFERENCES | 189 | ||
Chapter 10 | 191 | ||
Concluding Discussion | 191 | ||
Index | 195 | ||
Notes on Contributors | 205 |