Violence and the Imaginary: Some Reflections on and around the Occupy Movement

Starting from the idea that we can distinguish between two main types of the imaginary – the retrograde imaginary and the imaginary of liberation, and following Michel Foucault’s distinction between dialectic and strategic logic, this essay seeks to outline a trajectory of social and political chang...

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Main Author: Bruno Gullì
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mimesis Edizioni, Milano 2014-04-01
Series:Im@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary
Online Access:http://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/IMAGO/article/view/967
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spelling doaj-c3f828f70a554bccaa9df7188f1a5ab72020-11-25T01:06:07ZengMimesis Edizioni, MilanoIm@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary2281-81382281-81382014-04-0100567010.7413/2281-8138006760Violence and the Imaginary: Some Reflections on and around the Occupy MovementBruno GullìStarting from the idea that we can distinguish between two main types of the imaginary – the retrograde imaginary and the imaginary of liberation, and following Michel Foucault’s distinction between dialectic and strategic logic, this essay seeks to outline a trajectory of social and political change. The retrograde imaginary belongs to the sovereign and the sovereign police. The imaginary of liberation belongs to the radical imagination and revolutionary movements, including the Occupy movement. The essay has a first more theoretical section, where the point is made that perhaps, in the contemporary world, especially in some areas such as the U.S., there is an ongoing reversion to obsolete forms of domination. This would be a result of the fact that the powers that be no longer have hegemony, and they consequently need to exert domination on the basis of mere and raw violence. Or perhaps old and new forms of domination always coexist in such a way that sovereignty is present in all other forms of domination. The second part of the essay deals with some political matters that, originating in the U.S., have global importance. In particular, the essay offers an analysis of the Obama administration’s defense of the assassination program (especially the drone strikes) that is becoming a matter of great global, political and moral, concern. The essay ends with the idea that liberation movements, such as the Occupy movement, can provide an exit from the dominant logic of violence and from the increasingly troubling world’s situation.http://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/IMAGO/article/view/967
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bruno Gullì
spellingShingle Bruno Gullì
Violence and the Imaginary: Some Reflections on and around the Occupy Movement
Im@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary
author_facet Bruno Gullì
author_sort Bruno Gullì
title Violence and the Imaginary: Some Reflections on and around the Occupy Movement
title_short Violence and the Imaginary: Some Reflections on and around the Occupy Movement
title_full Violence and the Imaginary: Some Reflections on and around the Occupy Movement
title_fullStr Violence and the Imaginary: Some Reflections on and around the Occupy Movement
title_full_unstemmed Violence and the Imaginary: Some Reflections on and around the Occupy Movement
title_sort violence and the imaginary: some reflections on and around the occupy movement
publisher Mimesis Edizioni, Milano
series Im@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary
issn 2281-8138
2281-8138
publishDate 2014-04-01
description Starting from the idea that we can distinguish between two main types of the imaginary – the retrograde imaginary and the imaginary of liberation, and following Michel Foucault’s distinction between dialectic and strategic logic, this essay seeks to outline a trajectory of social and political change. The retrograde imaginary belongs to the sovereign and the sovereign police. The imaginary of liberation belongs to the radical imagination and revolutionary movements, including the Occupy movement. The essay has a first more theoretical section, where the point is made that perhaps, in the contemporary world, especially in some areas such as the U.S., there is an ongoing reversion to obsolete forms of domination. This would be a result of the fact that the powers that be no longer have hegemony, and they consequently need to exert domination on the basis of mere and raw violence. Or perhaps old and new forms of domination always coexist in such a way that sovereignty is present in all other forms of domination. The second part of the essay deals with some political matters that, originating in the U.S., have global importance. In particular, the essay offers an analysis of the Obama administration’s defense of the assassination program (especially the drone strikes) that is becoming a matter of great global, political and moral, concern. The essay ends with the idea that liberation movements, such as the Occupy movement, can provide an exit from the dominant logic of violence and from the increasingly troubling world’s situation.
url http://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/IMAGO/article/view/967
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