ABSTRACT

Social Movement Literature introduces readers to the study of those cultural texts that have come to define modern social movements. Looking at movements such as the US civil rights movement, gay liberation movement, environmental movement, and contemporary movement such as #metoo and Black Lives Matter, this volume focuses not just on the texts that social movements have produced, but also on those that have inspired and been inspired by those movements. As such, Social Movement Literature seeks to address a number of key questions: how do social movements develop and present not just their goals, but also their broader identities, using texts and other media? How are these movement texts received and further disseminated? Are there common features across movement texts? How and why do some of these texts continue to resonate today? By combining both textual and historical approaches to the analysis of social movements, this volume aims to give readers both an understanding of how social movements emerge and why they remain both political and culturally relevant today.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Social Movements in the Present

chapter 1|15 pages

Social Movements and Their Texts

chapter 2|13 pages

How to Read a Movement Text

chapter 3|31 pages

Master Frames and Collective Action Frames

chapter 4|22 pages

Injustice

chapter 5|31 pages

Identity

chapter 6|21 pages

Agency

chapter 7|22 pages

Memory

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion