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ID178540
Title ProperPolitical thinking performed
Other Title Informationpopular cultures as arenas of consent and resistance
LanguageENG
AuthorTripp, Charles
Summary / Abstract (Note)This contribution develops three major lines of argument. Firstly, it argues that identifying ‘popular culture’ is not simply a definitional exercise but is also purposeful and performative. Secondly, it contends that ‘popular cultures’ are always implicated in power relations in multiple ways. Finally, it maintains that using a performative lens adds to our understanding of the political dimensions of ‘popular cultures’. Taking examples chiefly from the Middle East and North Africa, it avers that studying ‘popular cultures’ highlights the links between the political and the performative, understood both as acting out (theatrical) and as bringing into being (effective). The term ‘culture(s) of the public(s)’ is used to capture the idea of the public as a plurality of active citizens, distinct from the politically charged term ‘the people’. These publics claim space as their right, experiencing agonistic encounters with the different generations, genders, classes, ethnicities that use their own repertoires to assert their claims. Thus, the cultures of the plural public can help to fashion the public self as citizen, but for that same reason can also provoke ferocious repression from those who feel most threatened by such a development.
`In' analytical NoteBritish Journal of Middle Eastern Studies Vol. 48, No.1; Feb 2021: p.7-23
Journal SourceBritish Journal of Middle Eastern Studies Vol: 48 No 1
Key WordsMiddle East ;  Popular Culture ;  Resistance ;  Political Thinking


 
 
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