ABSTRACT

This book examines how renewed forms of artistic activism were developed in the wake of the neoliberal repression since the 1980s.

The volume shows the diverse ways in which artists have sought to confront systemic crises around the globe, searching for new and enduring forms of building communities and reimagining the political horizon. The authors engage in a dialogue with these artistic efforts and their histories – in particular the earlier artistic activism that was developed during the civil rights era in the 1960s and 70s – providing valuable historical insight and new conceptual reflection on the future of aesthetic resilience.

This book will be of interest to scholars in contemporary art, history of art, film and literary studies, protest movements, and social movements.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Taking Aesthetics from Resistance to Resilience

part I|68 pages

Resilience: Searching for New Weapons While Fleeing

chapter 4|13 pages

Blackout

The Necropolitics of Extraction

chapter 5|13 pages

Movement of Movements

Resilient Strategies in the ‘Global South’

part II|68 pages

Global Conjunctions of Aesthetic Resilience

chapter 766|15 pages

Of Tricksters and Zombies

Re-imagining Outsideness in Contemporary Russian Activist Art

chapter 8|13 pages

Drones and Streets

On the Image Composition of the Tahrir and Gezi Occupations

chapter 9|13 pages

The Resilient City

When Social Activism Meets Media Arts in Hong Kong

part III|47 pages

Artistic Practices of Embodied Resilience

chapter 14411|13 pages

Feminist and Anti-Racist Graffiti

Disrupting Public Space in the 1970s in Britain

chapter 12|11 pages

The Black Radical

Fungibility, Activism, and Portraiture in These Times

chapter 14|11 pages

Embodied Narratives

Dance, Corporeality, and Creative Processes