Moments of excess : movements, protest and everyday life
(2011)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : PM Press, 2011
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781604865417 (electronic bk.) MWT14230029, 1604865415 (electronic bk.) 14230029
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

It's a physical thing. The hairs on the back on your arms stand up. You get goosebumps. There's a tingling in your spine. Your heart is racing. Your eyes shine and all your senses are heightened, sights, sounds, smells are all more intense. Somebody brushes past you, skin on skin, and you feel sparks. Even the acrid rasp of tear gas at the back of your throat becomes addictive, whilst a sip of water has come from the purest mountain spring. You have an earnest conversation with the total stranger standing next to you and it feels completely normal. (Not something that happens too often in the checkout queue at the supermarket.) Everybody is more attractive. You can't stop grinning. Fuck knows what endorphins your brain's producing, but it feels great. Collectivity is visceral! The first decade of the twenty-first century was marked by a series of global summits, which seemed to assume ever-greater importance-from the WTO ministerial meeting in Seattle at the end of 1999, through the G8 summits at Genoa, Evian and Gleneagles, up to the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP15) at Copenhagen in 2009. But, these global summits did not pass uncontested. Alongside and against them, there unfolded a different version of globalization. Moments of Excess is a collection of texts, which offer an insider analysis of this cycle of counter-summit mobilizations. It weaves lucid descriptions of the intensity of collective action into a more sober reflection on the developing problematics of the 'movement of movements'. The collection examines essential questions concerning the character of anti-capitalist movements, and the very meaning of movement; the relationship between intensive collective experiences-'moments of excess'-and 'everyday life'; and the tensions between open, all-inclusive, 'constitutive' practices, on the one hand, and the necessity of closure, limits and antagonism, on the other. Moments of Excess includes a new introduction explaining the origin of the texts and their relation to event-based politics, and a postscript, which explores new possibilities for anti-capitalist movements in the midst of crisis

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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