- The Oxford Handbook of Social Movements
- About the Contributors
- Author Index
- General Index
- Introduction: The Field of Social Movement Studies
- Social Movements in Social Theory
- Social Movements in Political Science
- Historical Analysis and Social Movements Research
- Contentious Politics
- New Theoretical Directions from the Study of Gender and Sexuality Movements: Collective Identity, Multi-Institutional Politics, and Emotions
- Historical Dynamics of Capitalism and Labor Movements
- Migration and Social Movements
- Religious Revivalism and Social Movements
- Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Social Movements
- Urban Dynamics and Social Movements
- Demography and Social Movements
- Motivations to Action
- Networks as Constraints and Opportunities
- Rational Action
- Micromobilization and Emotions
- Demobilization and Disengagement in a Life Course Perspective
- Social Movements and Organizational Analysis
- Network Approaches and Social Movements
- Social Movement Coalitions
- Movements as Communities
- New Technologies and Social Movements
- Geography and Social Movements
- Communication in Movements
- Strategy
- Repertoires of Contention
- Riots
- Political Violence
- Social Mobilization and Violence in Civil War and their Social Legacies
- Civil Resistance
- Consumer Strategies in Social Movements
- Voluntary Actions and Social Movements
- Cultural Conflicts and Social Movements
- Narrative and Social Movements
- The Art of Social Movement
- Visuals in Social Movements
- Practice Movements: The Politics of Non-Sovereign Power
- Immanent Accounts: Ethnography, Engagement, and Social Movement Practices
- Contentious Collective Action and the Evolving Nation-State
- Social Movements and the Multilateral Arena
- “The Game’s Afoot”: Social Movements in Authoritarian States
- Repression: The Governance of Domestic Dissent
- Managing Protest: The Political Action Repertoires of Corporations
- Party Systems, Electoral Systems, and Social Movements
- Populism, Social Movements, and Popular Subjectivity
- Markets, Business, and Social Movements
- Democracy in Social Movements
- Welfare Changes and Social Movements
- The Impacts of Environmental Movements
- Is it Social Movements that Construct Human Rights?
- The Conditions for Civil Society Participation in International Decision Making
- Democratic Innovations
- Revolutions and Regime Change
Abstract and Keywords
The arts are an established part of social movement repertoire. Artistic representations are important to internal movement dynamics and in communicating movement ideas to the wider world. Art practices form the core of the symbolic and expressive aspects of social movements. When created within movement contexts, art reveals truth as the movement sees it. At the same time and through the same process, artistic representations and expressions make the movement visible to itself. Movement art is thus part of the coming-to-be of a social movement. The art created within a social movement objectifies the ideas and emotions which motivate and guide that movement, providing a mirror for the movement to know itself. The same processes of objectification and representation make it possible to transmit protest traditions over time and space. Objectified and materialized, the art of social movements re-create protest traditions and become which become ready-made resources for other movements.
Keywords: movement art, cognitive praxis, symbolic expression, protest tradition, truth-bearing
Ron Eyerman is Professor of Sociology and Director of Graduate Studies at Yale University.
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- The Oxford Handbook of Social Movements
- About the Contributors
- Author Index
- General Index
- Introduction: The Field of Social Movement Studies
- Social Movements in Social Theory
- Social Movements in Political Science
- Historical Analysis and Social Movements Research
- Contentious Politics
- New Theoretical Directions from the Study of Gender and Sexuality Movements: Collective Identity, Multi-Institutional Politics, and Emotions
- Historical Dynamics of Capitalism and Labor Movements
- Migration and Social Movements
- Religious Revivalism and Social Movements
- Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Social Movements
- Urban Dynamics and Social Movements
- Demography and Social Movements
- Motivations to Action
- Networks as Constraints and Opportunities
- Rational Action
- Micromobilization and Emotions
- Demobilization and Disengagement in a Life Course Perspective
- Social Movements and Organizational Analysis
- Network Approaches and Social Movements
- Social Movement Coalitions
- Movements as Communities
- New Technologies and Social Movements
- Geography and Social Movements
- Communication in Movements
- Strategy
- Repertoires of Contention
- Riots
- Political Violence
- Social Mobilization and Violence in Civil War and their Social Legacies
- Civil Resistance
- Consumer Strategies in Social Movements
- Voluntary Actions and Social Movements
- Cultural Conflicts and Social Movements
- Narrative and Social Movements
- The Art of Social Movement
- Visuals in Social Movements
- Practice Movements: The Politics of Non-Sovereign Power
- Immanent Accounts: Ethnography, Engagement, and Social Movement Practices
- Contentious Collective Action and the Evolving Nation-State
- Social Movements and the Multilateral Arena
- “The Game’s Afoot”: Social Movements in Authoritarian States
- Repression: The Governance of Domestic Dissent
- Managing Protest: The Political Action Repertoires of Corporations
- Party Systems, Electoral Systems, and Social Movements
- Populism, Social Movements, and Popular Subjectivity
- Markets, Business, and Social Movements
- Democracy in Social Movements
- Welfare Changes and Social Movements
- The Impacts of Environmental Movements
- Is it Social Movements that Construct Human Rights?
- The Conditions for Civil Society Participation in International Decision Making
- Democratic Innovations
- Revolutions and Regime Change