ABSTRACT

By focusing on the textually mediated reactions of local residents, social movements, and media producers to policy changes implemented in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro, this book studies the development of literacy as a tool to mobilize, perform, and disseminate protest.

Researching Protest Literacies presents a combination of ethnographic fieldwork and extensive archival research to analyse how traditional and technology-driven literacy practices informed a new cycle of social protest in favelas from 2006-2016. Chapters trace nuanced interactions, document changing power balances, and in doing so conceptualize five forms of literacy used to enact social change - campaigning literacies, memorial literacies, media-activist literacies, arts-activist literacies, and demonstration literacies. Building on these, the study posits protest literacies as a new way of researching the role of contemporary literacy in protest.

This insightful monograph would be of interest to doctoral students, researchers, and scholars involved in the fields of literacy studies, arts education, and social movement studies, as well as those looking into research methods in education and international literacies more broadly.

part I|64 pages

Introduction and Background

chapter 2|19 pages

Socio-political Contexts

Brazil, Rio, and Maré

chapter 3|28 pages

Methodological Approaches

Ethnography and History

part II|68 pages

An Emerging Cycle of Protest 2006–2013

part III|90 pages

A Continuing Cycle of Protest 2014–2016

chapter 7|27 pages

Mega-events and Arts-activist Literacies

chapter 9|31 pages

Periods of Protest and Protest Literacies

part IV|22 pages

Conclusions and Contributions

chapter 10|20 pages

Protest Studies Through Literacy Studies