World, Labor, Garbage/Trash/Rubbish, Sanitation, Government, Urban, Parks, Activism, Justice (EJ)

Article Alert-Tactics of Waste, Dirt and Discard in the Occupy Movement

Currently “Tactics of Waste, Dirt and Discard in the Occupy Movement” is published as a forthcoming article in Social Movement Studies: Journal of Social, Cultural and Political Protest, but will soon be part of a special issue on the Occupy movement. From August until September, the special issue will have free and open access. When that open access ends, I will post an expanded version of the article on this blog with a full photographic archive.

City worker cleaning area around Occupy San Fransisco encampment, November 17th, 2011. Photo by Beck Diefenbach/AP. http://beckdiefenbach.com/editorial/?page_id=223

Abstract
Both Occupiers and our opponents have used waste and discards—figuratively and literally—in strategies to create and cultivate a new social movement on one hand, and to maintain power and control over protesters on the other. This study will look at the roles trash, waste, filth and discards have played in tactical decisions by both sides of the movement from the point of view of a New York City Occupier. Overall, the examples examined of trash, filth, discards and their attendant transgressions make up an ongoing political debate about the ideal society by both Occupiers and its opposition. These are the terms over which contests about what counts as tolerable and intolerable conditions, right and wrong, citizenship and the Other, acceptable and unacceptable behavior and what constitutes ‘out of placeness’ have been waged.

Liboiron, Max. (2012). “Tactics of Waste, Dirt and Discard in the Occupy Movement,” Social Movement Studies: Journal of Social, Cultural and Political Protest, Routledge.

Occupy Trash diagram, ink on paper, by Rachel Schragis in collaboration with the author

 

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About Max Liboiron

Max Liboiron is a Postdoctoral Fellow at New York University in the Media, Culture, and Communication Department. Her dissertation, Redefining Pollution: Plastics in the Wild, investigates scientific and advocate techniques used to define plastic pollution given that plastics are challenging centuries-old concepts of pollution as well as norms of pollution control, environmental advocacy, and concepts of contamination. She is also an activist and trash artist. www.maxliboiron.com

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