Spatial Resistance: Literary and Digital Challenges to Neoliberalism utilizes various literary and digital artifacts to show the potential and possibility of changing the ways we consider the spaces we inhabit. As many spaces become increasingly privatized and policed, it is necessary to contemplate ways in which corporate and state-controlled spaces can not only be subverted but fundamentally changed to embrace the diverse lived experiences of all peoples. Through an analysis of fictional and virtual spaces, readers will be able to identify new ways to institute spatial change in everyday spatial lives in an effort to promote more democratic and equal experiences. While this book uses primarily the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari to engender change, it also provides practical examples to amend, change, or update the actions to suit particular needs and spaces. This book shows that radical politics and the possibility of significant change can reside in just about any object or narrative; it is the responsibility of the individual to take up the task of creating social change premised on equality, liberty, and solidarity.
Autorentext
By Christian Beck
Klappentext
Inhalt
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The Nomad in the Desert
Chapter 1: Post-Modern Theory, Pre-Modern Tactics: Using the Past to Resist the Present
Chapter 2: The Tempest and the Coming Storm
Chapter 3: Dietland: The Spatial, Revolutionary Body
Chapter 4: Remapping the Story
Chapter 5: Digital Spaces and the Rise of Hacktivism
Chapter 6: #Tagging Social Space: Graffiti and Resistance
Chapter 7: De-Aerialization: Drones and Volumizing Space
Chapter 8: Digital Resistance
Conclusion: Nationalism is Not the Answer
Bibliography
Index
About the Author