SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 60
Dissident ThoughtMichael A. Peters
University of Waikato
University of Illinois
2016
Dissent and Negation as a
Condition of Discourse
Each society has its regime of truth, its ‘general politics’ of truth:
that is, the type of discourse which it accepts and makes function
as true
--Foucault
Orwell as Dissident
Dissident thought is that which takes
place against conformism and consensus
in the name of the good of society.
Everywhere the structures of repression of
the dominant group against minorities, of
racial, sexual and gender violence, of state
totalitarianism against the citizen, engender
sparks of dissidence that leads to a person,
movement, literature, discourse or a form of
scholarship that actively challenges an
established doctrine, policy, law or institution
to call out against unlawful violations of free
speech and “human rights.”
“Dissident”
Anthropology of dissidence
It is a critical principle of science, politics and discourse. It
may be an underground activity that exposes the secrets
and the contradictions of governments and subjects fellow
citizens to moral triage in opposing the unjust, often
resulting in hardship, punishment, exile and imprisonment.
The anthropology of dissidence can both theorize and
document the struggles on the ground in totalitarian Soviet
Russia, East Europe or China or against the cultural
imperialism of the West through the diverse activities of
politics, theatre, literature or poetry.
Samizdat
“Samizdat (Russian:
самизда́т; IPA:
[səmɨzˈdat]) was a key
form of dissident activity
across the Soviet bloc in
which individuals
reproduced censored and
underground publications
by hand and passed the
documents from reader to
reader.”
Self publishing
Genres included literary,
political, rellgious,
nationalist
Pasternak’s (1957) Dr
Zhivago
Solzhenitsyn’s (1962) One
Day in the Life of Ivan
Denisovich
Bulgakov’s (1967) The
Master & Margarita
Havel’s (1987) The Power
of the Powerless (how the
communist regime creates
dissidents of its ordinary
citizens)
Charter 77 – Manifesto of
dissent for Czechoslovakia
Self expression in a police
state
Russia – 200,000 readers
earliest samizdat
periodicals - Sintaksis
(1959-
60),Boomerang (1960),
Phoenix (1961)
A Chronicle of Current
Events (1968-1982)
Other countries: Poland,
Lithuania,
Czechoslovakia, Iran,
Germany (under military
rule), China
https://chronicle6883.wordpress.com/
Tamizdat
Russian literature
published abroad to
avoid censorship at
home by authors living
in Russia
The word first used in
the 1950s
Originate with Aleksandr
Herzen who established
The Free Press in
London in 1852
Main incident was Boris
Pasternak’s difficulty of
getting his novel Doktor
Zhivago because of his
descriptions of the
October Revolution that
were not in accordance
with official Russian
histriography.
Writers were arrested
subsequently for
publishing abroad
Dissident scientists
“A New Type of Intellectual:
The Dissident”- Julia Kristeva
Exile is already in itself a form of dissidence, since it involves
uprooting oneself from a family, a country or a language…Exile
is a way of surviving in the face of the dead father, which is the
meaning of life, of stubbornly refusing to give in to the law of
death…
This ruthless and irreverent dismanlting of the workings of
discourse, thought, and existence is …the work of a dissident.
Such dissidence requires ceasely analysis, vigilance and the will
to subversion, and therefore ncessarily enters into complicitt
with other dissident practices in the modern Western world.
For true dissidence today is perhaps simply what it has always
been: thought.
Chomsky
Tradition of Public Intellectual
Dissident thought
dissident thought as a form of public discourse and
academic scholarship that is the consequence of
outspoken public intellectuals who through their practice
dissent and refuse the brutal and arbitrary application of
power.
Globalization has given birth to its own geographical and
historical forms of protest, against “free trade,” “austerity,”
tyrannical dictatorships, environmental degradation,
finance capitalism and the greed of Wall St that led to the
Global Financial Crisis.
Ghandi and Freire
The tradition of non-violence
TruthOut
http://www.truth-out.org/
The Public Intellectual
Project
Henry Girouxhttp://www.truth-out.org/public-intellectual-
project
Chinese dissidents
Liu Xioabo – Charter 08 called for end of one-party rule,
independent judiciary, freedom of association, free
markets. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009
Li Zehou – an academic who called for Sinification of
Western concepts of human and civil rights, and rule of
law. Persecuted in the aftermath of 1989, now living in
exile.
Wei Jingsheng – Demcracy Wall Movement (1978-79) wh
propsoed fifth modernization to Deng Xiaping’s four
modernizations
Edward Snowden
Julian Assange
A netizen best known for
Wikileaks
https://wikileaks.org/inde
x.en.html
Green Dissidents &
Activists
Action, nonviolence, revolutionary action
Earth Liberation Front
(ELF):
Animal Liberation
Front (ALF):
Revolutionary Cells –
Animal Liberation
Brigade (RCALB):
Animal Rights Militia
(ARM):
Greenpeace
Disagreement
Dissident thought has a kinship relationship with the
ecology of concepts that proceed from the concepts of
dissent and the very possibility of disagreement as an
inherent aspect of discourse.
It has taken many different forms in relation to discourse
thought and action, and encompassed and cultivated
political norms associated with freedom of speech that
allows the expression of opposition, protest, revolt, and
the expression of anti-establishment thought that takes
the form of civil disobedience, non-violent protest and
sometimes revolutionary activity.
Opposition has taken the form
of the metaphysics of negation
Negation is something that we do. It is typically a
judgment that we make, a judgment that something is not
the case, and it usually—albeit by no means exclusively—
takes the form of a statement… Negations … are
commonplace, in our lives and in our grammar, and they
may well be a distinctive feature of human
communication. Almost two decades ago Jon Barwise
made the observation: “All human languages contain one
or more mechanisms of a negative character; no animal
communication does” (p. 247, my italics).
Daniel Dahlstrom (2010)
Wittgenstein, negation and the
possibility of discourse
Consider how Wittgenstein, with the Sheffer stroke,
introduced a negation operation to generate all truth
functions. Whether one analyzes knowledge claims as
suitably justified or as reliable true beliefs, it hardly
suffices to show that someone believes what is the case;
for both epistemological theories, it must be shown that
either the reasons an alleged knower has for his true
belief or the behavior he exhibits rule out beliefs to the
contrary. Thus, negation appears to be a primitive element
of our processes of thinking and knowing anything (p.
248)
Wittgenstein on rule-following
our agreement in language should be thought of as historically
extended and as remaining always open to challenges and
transformations. And the open and changeable nature of our
background consensus does affect the normativity of our
practices: its fallibility, its lack of finality. Our normative
assessments are never final and unrevisable. The correctness
of our linguistic actions can always be challenged; our moves in
language-games can always be normatively assessed in
different ways. This openness to contestation is grounded in the
openness to correction of our normative agency. Our language-
games are not composed of moves whose correctness can be
guaranteed once and for all; they are not activities that can be
exempted from critical scrutiny. In other words, language-games
are not self-justifying activities with absolute normative
autonomy (p. 8)
José Medina (2010)
History of Dissidence
The term dissidence is most often associated with Russian,
Central and East European movements opposing the regime in
the Soviet Union, beginning in the 1960s and culminating,
perhaps, in the statement by Vaclav Havel (1985: 23):
[Dissent] is a natural and inevitable consequence of the present
historical phase of the [Communist] system it is haunting. It was
born at a time, when this system, for a thousand reasons, can
no longer base itself on the unadulterated, brutal, and arbitrary
application of power, eliminating all expressions of
nonconformity. What is more, the system has become so
ossified politically that there is practically no way for such
nonconformity to be implemented within its official structures
Resistance
Aleppo
Ukraine
Syria
Resistance
Martin Luther King
Tiananmen Square
Vietnam Anti-War
Greenpeace
Indigenous Rights
Māori Resistance
Māori Protests
Parihaka
"The Treaty is a Fraud" (early 1980s)
Donna Awatere, Māori Sovereignty
Bastion Point (1977-78)
Raglan Golf Course
1975 Land March
Pākaitore (1995) Whanganui tribes
Takahue 1995
Huntly 1995
Te Mana Motuhake o Tuhoe
Te Urupatu 2005
Anti-terror raids 2007
Dissent as a
Philosophy of Non-
Agreement
The abolition of dissent is insstitutionalized in a monological
pedagogy that cultivates the production of pupils as ideology-
receptacles.
A political constant
Dissent is structurally or formally enabled in political
systems through opposition parties often accompanied by
social or political activism and forms of civil disobedience
organised by those called “dissidents”, where it is not
entirely supressed and driven underground by repressive
regimes.
Dissent in this sense as a principle of public discourse in a
democracy rests on and is dependent on freedom of
thought framed by freedom of speech that enshrines the
possibility of dissent as a useful working political
methodology that enable the expression of dissenting
ideas especially from minorities against a majority
consensus.
Kantian culture of criticism
Dissent is also the living force that enables dissident
thought to take the form of criticism beginning as textual
commentary and leading to interpretation that opposes or
takes its departure from established thought. In the
modern sense criticism is born with the three Kantian
critiques as inquiries into the very possibility of knowledge.
Kant’s critique is an inquiry into the very possibility of
knowledge and the capacity of human reason to be able
to undertake it.
a question with regard to the mode of self-legitimation of
any project of knowledge: “in what way?” and “by what
right?”
Hegel, Marx and Critical
Theory
The “first generation” of critical theorists was largely
occupied with the functional and conceptual re-
qualification of Hegel’s dialectics. After Habermas,
preference has been assigned to the understanding of the
conditions of action coordination through the underpinning
of the conditions of validity for speech-acts. The third
generation, then, following the works of Honneth, turned
back to Hegel’s philosophy and in particular to Hegel’s
notion of “recognition” as a cognitive and pre-linguistic
sphere grounding intersubjectivity.
Claudio Corradetti
The Nihil
The nihil of Russian nihilism is also a form of negation. It
is only one species of nihilism that dates back to the
Greek philosopher Gorgias where negation was cultivated
as an expression of meaninglessness. Typically nihilism
takes a variety of forms: metaphysical (no objects),
epistemological (only sketpicism), moral (no morality),
existential (no intrinisic value) or political (no authority).
Russian nihilism was a movement in the 1860s that
rejected all political authority and sanction violence as a
means of political change.
Nietzsche & Heidegger
The history of Western thought as Western metaphysics
as the destruction of Being.
The “no,” the “negation” inherent in this version of the nihil
is a powerful source of dissent and of dissident thought
disrupting the traditional hierarchy of values, challenging
the self-aggrandising mythology used to buttress the
timeless truths of the West, and through this negation
opening up the West for an alternative set of futures.
Nietzsche and Heidegger’s interpretation set out a new
discursive game in philosophy that can talk of creation
within a nonfoundational universe and it acts as a source
of inspiration for Sartre, Deleuze, Derrida, Foucault,
Vattimo, Rorty, Severino and many others
Deleuze
For me the most definitive of the French Nietzsche revival was
Deleuze whose book Nietzsche and Philosophy (1962) paved
the way for a concept of “dissident thought”, together with
Foucault’s materialization of discourse and Roland Barthes’
nouvelle critique. Each of these proposed useful accounts of
“dissident thought” that broadened and diversified the practice,
ethos and institution of criticism. In each case the formal
oppositional viewpoint is amplified and given new strength and
direction.
In this context “dissident thought” differs from the Enlightenment
emphasis on consensus but looks to dissensus. It is not tuned to
a convergence but exists only as a divergence and diversity of
thought
A Theory of Dissent in
Jurisprudence
Thomas Morawetz (1992) provides a Wittgensteinian
understanding of the possibility of “disagreement” in jurisprudence.
Against foundationist
jurisprudence
Morawetz explains the move from the old foundationalist
jurisprudence motivated by the possibility of achieving a
consensus on public values and social progress to a new
sceptical and antifoundationalist jurisprudence that has
fallen under the spell of philosophical arguments about
language, truth and meaning, originating in Wittgenstein
and played out by Richard Rorty in a rebuttal of
“knowledge as accurate representation”.
The New Jurisprudence
The transition to the new jurisprudence takes place
through three “destabilization arguments”: the moral
argument destabilizes liberalism faith in public values
through an assault on the objectivity of rights; “the
conceptual argument impeaches ideological neutrality by
uncovering multiple narratives and alternative voices that
coexist in time and space and offer irreconcilable ways of
ordering experience.
Law as deliberative practice
If Wittgenstein is right, and if philosophy "leaves
everything as it is," then describing law as a deliberative
practice can be neither conservative nor radical. The law
itself, the deliberative practice that is law, will be
conservative if the society is homogeneous or successfully
repressive, if new voices and ways of thinking remain
unrepresented. The law will be radical if society is
heterogeneous and new ways of justifying and conceiving
aims are continually given legal expression. The law will,
furthermore, be liberal in Mill's sense whenever it is open
to new ways of thinking, whenever judges recognize that
their ways of reasoning and justifying, i.e. their stake, do
not necessarily have hegemony (p. 456).
Dissidence and
Dissent in Political
Life: The 1960’s
counterculture
Much of the organized radicalism appeared under the acceptable
face of democratic socialism that had imbibed the principles of
dissent from various forms of Western Marxism
History of protest
The history of dissident thought in the West and the
meaning of opposition was part of the dialectics of the
Cold War and the organized radicalism that took place in
the 1950s to formulate an anti-Stalinist Left, a living
embodiment of dissent based on the power of critique.
The 1960s counterculture was not confined to the US or
the West. Its radical underpinnings were in decolonization
movements initiated by Gandhi’s philosophy of non-
violence, the work of Fanon, Césaire, and other
”postcolonial” theorists
Birth of Modern Radical
Movements
Radical movements in the post-war that began in the US
and Europe, spread quickly to South America, the Eastern
bloc and the Antipodes. The American civil rights
movement under Martin Luther King Jr. initiated protest
action to end the official segregation and
disenfranchisement of African-Americans, and later
produced radical groups such as Black Power movement,
Black Panther Party and Black Muslims
Postcolonialism’ was coming of age at least in the sense
that many countries in Africa and Asia had recently
received their independence and authors such as Frantz
Fanon and Aimé Césaire, as well as the Harlem
Renaissance poets, had been rediscovered.
Mass protests
The 1960s also heralded an age of mass protest against
the Vietnam War and US foreign policy in the late 1960s
which grew out of the 1950s “peace movement” and CND
that radicalized a generation of student-youth, based
mostly in universities
The 1960s became synonymous with emergent, novel
and experimental cultural forms, especially revolving
popular music and the rapid growth of ‘oppositional’ and
‘defiant’ youth subcultures.
Global Non-violent Action
Database
Maori resistance to British
land seizure at Parihaka, New
Zealand, 1879-81
“Te Whiti was one of the most
remarkable of the Maori
prophetic figures of the
nineteenth century. He provided
leadership to his people in
establishing a model community
at Parihaka and enabled them
by non-violent means to protest
at the unjust confiscation of
their lands. Furthermore, this
was 60 years before Mahatma
Gandhi in India.”
Māori struggles and the TPPA,
2016
Dissident Postmodern Fiction
Dissident tendency in the work of Barthelme, Coover,
Pynchon, Burroughs, DeLillio, Acker and Reed
Introverted tendency in Nabokov, Gass and Barth
“embodies that enlarged notion of the political within the
sphere of language…” (p, 529)
“the ‘real’ …does not speak for itself, and the search for
meaning, the endeavour to intrepret the world, is
perceived as a process of fictionalizing reality, of
‘storifying’ it” (p. 530)
‘Postmodern Practices’, Paul Maltby in A Postmodern
Reader, Joseph Natoli & Linda Hutcheon (1993)
Waves of Global
Resistance
In a strong sense this first global movement of dissidence
based on the export of countercultural youth styles around
the globe also set the condition and tone for the second
and third global movements: the anti-capitalist and anti-
globalization struggles of 1990s and 2000s, a kind of
rainbow coalition with a strong ecology and sustainability
orientation, and; the movement of cyberactivism that grew
from the hacker cultures of the 1960s (Levy, 1984)
dedicated to the principle of free information to its maturity
in the work of Richard Stallman and Linus Torvalds, as
intellectual leaders of the openness movement.
Research Group on
International Studies
Globalization, post-9/11 politics and the post-2008 financial crisis have
all birthed modes and histories of opposition and dissent, be they
dissent from global political-economic systems or opposition to ranges
of international authoritarian regimes. Contemporary dissent,
however, oft-draws from forms and imaginations of earlier modes of
protest, be they student protests from the late ‘60s onward, the peace
movement in the same period, the anti-nukes movement of the 1980s
or the anti-Apartheid movement spanning the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s. Still,
dissent takes other historical forms: individual critiques of “actually
existing” socialist systems, be they civil rights based critique from
individual figures such as Sakharov or Rostropovich (or
Solzhenitsyn’s nationalist-culturalism), media-driven dissent, such as
the political magazine Mladina’s criticisms of the Yugoslav regime in
the late 1980s and early 1990s or the voices of “everyday” social
actors, such as the Damas de Blanco in Cuba. In a historical period
encapsulating the last decades of the Cold War and an unfolding
twenty-first century, dissent and social opposition undergo and have
undergone redefinition within the confines of modern and
contemporary culture.
The epoch of digital reason
In the epoch of digital reason (Peters, 2014) in what ways
is resistance possible within the global mode of digital
governmentality that subjects us to new horizontal and
democratic forms of control where self-surveillance
parallels the digital panopticon of big data systems and
surveillance technologies both the State and the digital
multinational corporation?
Frédéric Gros
Foucault's great studies of disciplinary society are useful above
all because they allow us to delineate, through contrast and
comparison, the digital governmentality that subjects us to new
forms of control, which are less vertical, more democratic and,
above all, no longer burdened by any anthropological ballast.
Homo digitalis today participates in, is the primary agent of, the
surveillance of himself. Digital society is becoming a form of
mutualised control. We should today consider the treatment of
'big data' working with Foucault, basing ourselves on him, but
seeing further than he could. Because we have gone well
beyond the disciplinary age. Security's new concepts are no
longer imprisoning individuals and normative consciousness, but
rather traceability and algorithmic profiling.
New forms of dissidence
In these new forms of dissidence that increasingly
define prodemocracy, ecological movements, and
cyberactivism, political subjectivity depends on the
global linking of autonomous cells and regional
networks in transversal and rhizomic structures that
favour horizontal, non-hierarchical and transspecies
connections. These networks of hope are the
emergent counter-practices and counter-conducts
that speak truth to power in the emergent
interconnected digital world that is now our home.
The Dissident Blog publishes
what the rulers want to delete
It has never been so easy to publish or make your voice heard
as it is today. Through websites, blogs and social media people
all around the worldhave been given new opportunities to freely
spread their words. However, at the same time as new doors
have opened totalitarian regimes are slowly but surely trying to
censor new digital media. Blogs that contains uncomfortable
truths are shut down and writers are silenced by intimidation and
reprisals. New grids have fallen over the Internet as censors try
to keep pace with technological developments.
Swedish PEN’s The Dissident Blog wants to present the
forbidden texts—the ones that can neither be written nor
published in the writers’ own countries. We want to give these
texts both a Swedish and an international audience.
https://www.dissidentblog.org/
Appendix: List of Dissident
Websites
http://aidswiki.net/index.php/List_of_di
ssident_websites
Information Resources
Support, Service and Activist Organisations
Blogs and discussion groups
Websites of individual dissidents
Books
Audio and film/video media
Other relevant links
Thank you

More Related Content

What's hot

Письменник та громадський діяч Андрій Чайковський
 Письменник та громадський діяч Андрій Чайковський  Письменник та громадський діяч Андрій Чайковський
Письменник та громадський діяч Андрій Чайковський Дарницька Книгиня
 
Johnson by Anuja Raj
Johnson by Anuja RajJohnson by Anuja Raj
Johnson by Anuja RajAnuja Raj
 
Василь Голобородько. Поет українського відродження
Василь Голобородько. Поет українського відродженняВасиль Голобородько. Поет українського відродження
Василь Голобородько. Поет українського відродженняSavua
 
паризька мирна конференція
паризька мирна конференціяпаризька мирна конференція
паризька мирна конференціяtetjanacheban
 
Formalism
FormalismFormalism
Formalismdrjward
 
The 18th century
The 18th centuryThe 18th century
The 18th centurycollege
 
Plagiarism and Academic Integrity
Plagiarism and Academic Integrity Plagiarism and Academic Integrity
Plagiarism and Academic Integrity megha trivedi
 
comparative literature by Susan Bassnett
comparative literature by Susan Bassnett comparative literature by Susan Bassnett
comparative literature by Susan Bassnett NidhiDave30
 
Victorian Poet: Alfred Tennyson and Robert Browning
Victorian Poet: Alfred Tennyson and Robert BrowningVictorian Poet: Alfred Tennyson and Robert Browning
Victorian Poet: Alfred Tennyson and Robert BrowningJitendra Sumra
 
Postcolonialism and Midnight's Children
Postcolonialism and Midnight's ChildrenPostcolonialism and Midnight's Children
Postcolonialism and Midnight's ChildrenDilip Barad
 
Schools of Comparative Literature Studies
Schools of Comparative Literature StudiesSchools of Comparative Literature Studies
Schools of Comparative Literature StudiesDilip Barad
 
Humanism in renaissance era
Humanism in renaissance eraHumanism in renaissance era
Humanism in renaissance eraShahanAhmed5
 
Go and Catch a Falling Star (Poem)
Go and Catch a Falling Star (Poem)Go and Catch a Falling Star (Poem)
Go and Catch a Falling Star (Poem)Farwa Aqeel
 
Robert browning ppt
Robert browning pptRobert browning ppt
Robert browning pptRiddhi Bhatt
 
Gayatri Spivak and Subaltern
Gayatri Spivak and SubalternGayatri Spivak and Subaltern
Gayatri Spivak and SubalternLatta Baraiya
 
Postcolonial literature
Postcolonial literaturePostcolonial literature
Postcolonial literatureMisbah Iqbal
 
йов борецький
йов борецькиййов борецький
йов борецькийaliusia77
 

What's hot (20)

South Asian Poets
South Asian PoetsSouth Asian Poets
South Asian Poets
 
Письменник та громадський діяч Андрій Чайковський
 Письменник та громадський діяч Андрій Чайковський  Письменник та громадський діяч Андрій Чайковський
Письменник та громадський діяч Андрій Чайковський
 
Johnson by Anuja Raj
Johnson by Anuja RajJohnson by Anuja Raj
Johnson by Anuja Raj
 
Василь Голобородько. Поет українського відродження
Василь Голобородько. Поет українського відродженняВасиль Голобородько. Поет українського відродження
Василь Голобородько. Поет українського відродження
 
паризька мирна конференція
паризька мирна конференціяпаризька мирна конференція
паризька мирна конференція
 
Formalism
FormalismFormalism
Formalism
 
subaltern.pptx
subaltern.pptxsubaltern.pptx
subaltern.pptx
 
Formalism
FormalismFormalism
Formalism
 
The 18th century
The 18th centuryThe 18th century
The 18th century
 
Plagiarism and Academic Integrity
Plagiarism and Academic Integrity Plagiarism and Academic Integrity
Plagiarism and Academic Integrity
 
comparative literature by Susan Bassnett
comparative literature by Susan Bassnett comparative literature by Susan Bassnett
comparative literature by Susan Bassnett
 
Victorian Poet: Alfred Tennyson and Robert Browning
Victorian Poet: Alfred Tennyson and Robert BrowningVictorian Poet: Alfred Tennyson and Robert Browning
Victorian Poet: Alfred Tennyson and Robert Browning
 
Postcolonialism and Midnight's Children
Postcolonialism and Midnight's ChildrenPostcolonialism and Midnight's Children
Postcolonialism and Midnight's Children
 
Schools of Comparative Literature Studies
Schools of Comparative Literature StudiesSchools of Comparative Literature Studies
Schools of Comparative Literature Studies
 
Humanism in renaissance era
Humanism in renaissance eraHumanism in renaissance era
Humanism in renaissance era
 
Go and Catch a Falling Star (Poem)
Go and Catch a Falling Star (Poem)Go and Catch a Falling Star (Poem)
Go and Catch a Falling Star (Poem)
 
Robert browning ppt
Robert browning pptRobert browning ppt
Robert browning ppt
 
Gayatri Spivak and Subaltern
Gayatri Spivak and SubalternGayatri Spivak and Subaltern
Gayatri Spivak and Subaltern
 
Postcolonial literature
Postcolonial literaturePostcolonial literature
Postcolonial literature
 
йов борецький
йов борецькиййов борецький
йов борецький
 

Viewers also liked

Choosing Open (#GO_GN) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
Choosing Open (#GO_GN) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HEChoosing Open (#GO_GN) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
Choosing Open (#GO_GN) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HECatherine Cronin
 
Creating Spaces for Student Voices
Creating Spaces for Student VoicesCreating Spaces for Student Voices
Creating Spaces for Student VoicesCatherine Cronin
 
#Opened16 Conference Presentation
#Opened16 Conference Presentation#Opened16 Conference Presentation
#Opened16 Conference PresentationVivien Rolfe
 
Plan semanal 2016
Plan semanal 2016Plan semanal 2016
Plan semanal 2016Jovelis15
 
Brightstar Aluminum Machinery
Brightstar Aluminum MachineryBrightstar Aluminum Machinery
Brightstar Aluminum MachineryNJ Lee
 
Tema lili y karelys2 (este si)
Tema lili y karelys2 (este si)Tema lili y karelys2 (este si)
Tema lili y karelys2 (este si)liliana perez
 
アートを社会のニーズに変える! 『 アートマネジメント講座・入門編 』:第6回「継続していくために必要なこと」
アートを社会のニーズに変える! 『 アートマネジメント講座・入門編 』:第6回「継続していくために必要なこと」アートを社会のニーズに変える! 『 アートマネジメント講座・入門編 』:第6回「継続していくために必要なこと」
アートを社会のニーズに変える! 『 アートマネジメント講座・入門編 』:第6回「継続していくために必要なこと」Makoto Hashimoto
 
Quest IRA PPT July 2016
Quest IRA PPT July 2016Quest IRA PPT July 2016
Quest IRA PPT July 2016Kenn Renner
 
Competencias disciplinares extendidas
Competencias disciplinares extendidas Competencias disciplinares extendidas
Competencias disciplinares extendidas jorge armando
 
A minha guerra 24012016 Carlos Colina
A minha guerra 24012016 Carlos ColinaA minha guerra 24012016 Carlos Colina
A minha guerra 24012016 Carlos Colinabart3881
 
Automatizacion de la descarga de un Acoplado tolva autodescargable
Automatizacion de la descarga de un Acoplado tolva autodescargableAutomatizacion de la descarga de un Acoplado tolva autodescargable
Automatizacion de la descarga de un Acoplado tolva autodescargableLaureano Zantedeschi
 
tasaciones de inmuebles modelos
tasaciones de inmuebles modelostasaciones de inmuebles modelos
tasaciones de inmuebles modelosbrashwanderer3102
 
Quando te conheci - Partitura para coral SCTB - ProAlex
Quando te conheci - Partitura para coral SCTB - ProAlexQuando te conheci - Partitura para coral SCTB - ProAlex
Quando te conheci - Partitura para coral SCTB - ProAlexAlex Santos
 
Praktikum parasitologi blok HIV/AIDS
Praktikum parasitologi blok HIV/AIDSPraktikum parasitologi blok HIV/AIDS
Praktikum parasitologi blok HIV/AIDSSyscha Lumempouw
 
Swift, jonathan los viajes de gulliver (adaptación)
Swift, jonathan los viajes de gulliver (adaptación)Swift, jonathan los viajes de gulliver (adaptación)
Swift, jonathan los viajes de gulliver (adaptación)Escuela De Comercio Nº 5005
 
Choosing Open (#OEGlobal) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
Choosing Open (#OEGlobal) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HEChoosing Open (#OEGlobal) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
Choosing Open (#OEGlobal) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HECatherine Cronin
 
The Constraints of Policy: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Open Education Po...
The Constraints of Policy: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Open Education Po...The Constraints of Policy: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Open Education Po...
The Constraints of Policy: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Open Education Po...Open Education Consortium
 
Towards ethical open practices at a University of Technology during times of ...
Towards ethical open practices at a University of Technology during times of ...Towards ethical open practices at a University of Technology during times of ...
Towards ethical open practices at a University of Technology during times of ...Open Education Consortium
 

Viewers also liked (20)

Choosing Open (#GO_GN) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
Choosing Open (#GO_GN) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HEChoosing Open (#GO_GN) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
Choosing Open (#GO_GN) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
 
Creating Spaces for Student Voices
Creating Spaces for Student VoicesCreating Spaces for Student Voices
Creating Spaces for Student Voices
 
#Opened16 Conference Presentation
#Opened16 Conference Presentation#Opened16 Conference Presentation
#Opened16 Conference Presentation
 
Falcon
FalconFalcon
Falcon
 
Plan semanal 2016
Plan semanal 2016Plan semanal 2016
Plan semanal 2016
 
Brightstar Aluminum Machinery
Brightstar Aluminum MachineryBrightstar Aluminum Machinery
Brightstar Aluminum Machinery
 
Tema lili y karelys2 (este si)
Tema lili y karelys2 (este si)Tema lili y karelys2 (este si)
Tema lili y karelys2 (este si)
 
アートを社会のニーズに変える! 『 アートマネジメント講座・入門編 』:第6回「継続していくために必要なこと」
アートを社会のニーズに変える! 『 アートマネジメント講座・入門編 』:第6回「継続していくために必要なこと」アートを社会のニーズに変える! 『 アートマネジメント講座・入門編 』:第6回「継続していくために必要なこと」
アートを社会のニーズに変える! 『 アートマネジメント講座・入門編 』:第6回「継続していくために必要なこと」
 
Golf...
Golf...Golf...
Golf...
 
Quest IRA PPT July 2016
Quest IRA PPT July 2016Quest IRA PPT July 2016
Quest IRA PPT July 2016
 
Competencias disciplinares extendidas
Competencias disciplinares extendidas Competencias disciplinares extendidas
Competencias disciplinares extendidas
 
A minha guerra 24012016 Carlos Colina
A minha guerra 24012016 Carlos ColinaA minha guerra 24012016 Carlos Colina
A minha guerra 24012016 Carlos Colina
 
Automatizacion de la descarga de un Acoplado tolva autodescargable
Automatizacion de la descarga de un Acoplado tolva autodescargableAutomatizacion de la descarga de un Acoplado tolva autodescargable
Automatizacion de la descarga de un Acoplado tolva autodescargable
 
tasaciones de inmuebles modelos
tasaciones de inmuebles modelostasaciones de inmuebles modelos
tasaciones de inmuebles modelos
 
Quando te conheci - Partitura para coral SCTB - ProAlex
Quando te conheci - Partitura para coral SCTB - ProAlexQuando te conheci - Partitura para coral SCTB - ProAlex
Quando te conheci - Partitura para coral SCTB - ProAlex
 
Praktikum parasitologi blok HIV/AIDS
Praktikum parasitologi blok HIV/AIDSPraktikum parasitologi blok HIV/AIDS
Praktikum parasitologi blok HIV/AIDS
 
Swift, jonathan los viajes de gulliver (adaptación)
Swift, jonathan los viajes de gulliver (adaptación)Swift, jonathan los viajes de gulliver (adaptación)
Swift, jonathan los viajes de gulliver (adaptación)
 
Choosing Open (#OEGlobal) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
Choosing Open (#OEGlobal) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HEChoosing Open (#OEGlobal) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
Choosing Open (#OEGlobal) - Openness and praxis: Using OEP in HE
 
The Constraints of Policy: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Open Education Po...
The Constraints of Policy: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Open Education Po...The Constraints of Policy: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Open Education Po...
The Constraints of Policy: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Open Education Po...
 
Towards ethical open practices at a University of Technology during times of ...
Towards ethical open practices at a University of Technology during times of ...Towards ethical open practices at a University of Technology during times of ...
Towards ethical open practices at a University of Technology during times of ...
 

Similar to Dissident thought

A postmodern neo marxist’s guide to free speech
A postmodern neo marxist’s guide to free speechA postmodern neo marxist’s guide to free speech
A postmodern neo marxist’s guide to free speechRahulrajYuvanraj
 
international relation
international relation international relation
international relation Julien Mort
 
Only A Trickster Can Save Us: Hypercommandeering Queer Identity Positions
Only A Trickster Can Save Us: Hypercommandeering Queer Identity PositionsOnly A Trickster Can Save Us: Hypercommandeering Queer Identity Positions
Only A Trickster Can Save Us: Hypercommandeering Queer Identity Positionsinventionjournals
 
Rethinking Realpolitik: The Afterglobalization Movement and Beyond
Rethinking Realpolitik: The Afterglobalization Movement and BeyondRethinking Realpolitik: The Afterglobalization Movement and Beyond
Rethinking Realpolitik: The Afterglobalization Movement and BeyondPhiloWeb
 
Anarchism And Nationalism
Anarchism And NationalismAnarchism And Nationalism
Anarchism And NationalismSuzanne Simmons
 
Proposal Essay Topics Ideas. Reflection Essay: Proposing a solution essay ideas
Proposal Essay Topics Ideas. Reflection Essay: Proposing a solution essay ideasProposal Essay Topics Ideas. Reflection Essay: Proposing a solution essay ideas
Proposal Essay Topics Ideas. Reflection Essay: Proposing a solution essay ideasHeidi Andrews
 
The anthropology of sexuality discourse and sex work
The anthropology of sexuality  discourse and sex workThe anthropology of sexuality  discourse and sex work
The anthropology of sexuality discourse and sex workUniversity of Dhaka
 
Political Theory and Freedom of Choices
Political Theory and Freedom of ChoicesPolitical Theory and Freedom of Choices
Political Theory and Freedom of Choicesbijsshrjournal
 
ferneeamericancivilwar.pdf
ferneeamericancivilwar.pdfferneeamericancivilwar.pdf
ferneeamericancivilwar.pdfKanikaBansal52
 

Similar to Dissident thought (11)

A postmodern neo marxist’s guide to free speech
A postmodern neo marxist’s guide to free speechA postmodern neo marxist’s guide to free speech
A postmodern neo marxist’s guide to free speech
 
international relation
international relation international relation
international relation
 
Only A Trickster Can Save Us: Hypercommandeering Queer Identity Positions
Only A Trickster Can Save Us: Hypercommandeering Queer Identity PositionsOnly A Trickster Can Save Us: Hypercommandeering Queer Identity Positions
Only A Trickster Can Save Us: Hypercommandeering Queer Identity Positions
 
What postmodernism is.
What postmodernism is.What postmodernism is.
What postmodernism is.
 
Rethinking Realpolitik: The Afterglobalization Movement and Beyond
Rethinking Realpolitik: The Afterglobalization Movement and BeyondRethinking Realpolitik: The Afterglobalization Movement and Beyond
Rethinking Realpolitik: The Afterglobalization Movement and Beyond
 
Anarchism And Nationalism
Anarchism And NationalismAnarchism And Nationalism
Anarchism And Nationalism
 
Proposal Essay Topics Ideas. Reflection Essay: Proposing a solution essay ideas
Proposal Essay Topics Ideas. Reflection Essay: Proposing a solution essay ideasProposal Essay Topics Ideas. Reflection Essay: Proposing a solution essay ideas
Proposal Essay Topics Ideas. Reflection Essay: Proposing a solution essay ideas
 
Postmodern LitCrit
Postmodern LitCritPostmodern LitCrit
Postmodern LitCrit
 
The anthropology of sexuality discourse and sex work
The anthropology of sexuality  discourse and sex workThe anthropology of sexuality  discourse and sex work
The anthropology of sexuality discourse and sex work
 
Political Theory and Freedom of Choices
Political Theory and Freedom of ChoicesPolitical Theory and Freedom of Choices
Political Theory and Freedom of Choices
 
ferneeamericancivilwar.pdf
ferneeamericancivilwar.pdfferneeamericancivilwar.pdf
ferneeamericancivilwar.pdf
 

More from Michael Peters

Gender, education & new technologies
Gender, education & new technologies Gender, education & new technologies
Gender, education & new technologies Michael Peters
 
The End of European Multiculturalism?
The End of European Multiculturalism?The End of European Multiculturalism?
The End of European Multiculturalism?Michael Peters
 
Education, philosophy & politics
Education, philosophy & politicsEducation, philosophy & politics
Education, philosophy & politicsMichael Peters
 
Cultures of Openness: New Architectures of Global Collaboration in Higher Edu...
Cultures of Openness: New Architectures of Global Collaboration in Higher Edu...Cultures of Openness: New Architectures of Global Collaboration in Higher Edu...
Cultures of Openness: New Architectures of Global Collaboration in Higher Edu...Michael Peters
 
What is neoliberalism?
What is neoliberalism?What is neoliberalism?
What is neoliberalism?Michael Peters
 
The Theatre of Fast Knowledge: Performative Epistemologies in Higher Education
The Theatre of Fast Knowledge: Performative Epistemologies in Higher Education The Theatre of Fast Knowledge: Performative Epistemologies in Higher Education
The Theatre of Fast Knowledge: Performative Epistemologies in Higher Education Michael Peters
 
Research quality, bibliometrics and the republic of science
Research quality, bibliometrics and the republic of scienceResearch quality, bibliometrics and the republic of science
Research quality, bibliometrics and the republic of scienceMichael Peters
 
The Virtues of Openness
The Virtues of OpennessThe Virtues of Openness
The Virtues of OpennessMichael Peters
 
Openness’ and ‘open education’
Openness’ and ‘open education’Openness’ and ‘open education’
Openness’ and ‘open education’Michael Peters
 
Narrative inquiry & research
Narrative inquiry & research Narrative inquiry & research
Narrative inquiry & research Michael Peters
 
Education in a post truth world
Education in a post truth worldEducation in a post truth world
Education in a post truth worldMichael Peters
 

More from Michael Peters (15)

Gender, education & new technologies
Gender, education & new technologies Gender, education & new technologies
Gender, education & new technologies
 
The End of European Multiculturalism?
The End of European Multiculturalism?The End of European Multiculturalism?
The End of European Multiculturalism?
 
Education, philosophy & politics
Education, philosophy & politicsEducation, philosophy & politics
Education, philosophy & politics
 
Dreams of dionysos
Dreams of dionysosDreams of dionysos
Dreams of dionysos
 
Cultures of Openness: New Architectures of Global Collaboration in Higher Edu...
Cultures of Openness: New Architectures of Global Collaboration in Higher Edu...Cultures of Openness: New Architectures of Global Collaboration in Higher Edu...
Cultures of Openness: New Architectures of Global Collaboration in Higher Edu...
 
What is neoliberalism?
What is neoliberalism?What is neoliberalism?
What is neoliberalism?
 
Virtuous learning
Virtuous learningVirtuous learning
Virtuous learning
 
The Theatre of Fast Knowledge: Performative Epistemologies in Higher Education
The Theatre of Fast Knowledge: Performative Epistemologies in Higher Education The Theatre of Fast Knowledge: Performative Epistemologies in Higher Education
The Theatre of Fast Knowledge: Performative Epistemologies in Higher Education
 
Research quality, bibliometrics and the republic of science
Research quality, bibliometrics and the republic of scienceResearch quality, bibliometrics and the republic of science
Research quality, bibliometrics and the republic of science
 
The Virtues of Openness
The Virtues of OpennessThe Virtues of Openness
The Virtues of Openness
 
Openness’ and ‘open education’
Openness’ and ‘open education’Openness’ and ‘open education’
Openness’ and ‘open education’
 
Opening the book
Opening the bookOpening the book
Opening the book
 
Neoconservatism
NeoconservatismNeoconservatism
Neoconservatism
 
Narrative inquiry & research
Narrative inquiry & research Narrative inquiry & research
Narrative inquiry & research
 
Education in a post truth world
Education in a post truth worldEducation in a post truth world
Education in a post truth world
 

Recently uploaded

ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4MiaBumagat1
 
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptxmary850239
 
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfActive Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfPatidar M
 
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Celine George
 
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17Celine George
 
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptxINTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptxHumphrey A Beña
 
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptxmary850239
 
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...JojoEDelaCruz
 
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfVanessa Camilleri
 
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxBarangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxCarlos105
 
What is Model Inheritance in Odoo 17 ERP
What is Model Inheritance in Odoo 17 ERPWhat is Model Inheritance in Odoo 17 ERP
What is Model Inheritance in Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
 
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...Seán Kennedy
 
Visit to a blind student's school🧑‍🦯🧑‍🦯(community medicine)
Visit to a blind student's school🧑‍🦯🧑‍🦯(community medicine)Visit to a blind student's school🧑‍🦯🧑‍🦯(community medicine)
Visit to a blind student's school🧑‍🦯🧑‍🦯(community medicine)lakshayb543
 
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxKarra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxAshokKarra1
 
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for ParentsChoosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parentsnavabharathschool99
 
Food processing presentation for bsc agriculture hons
Food processing presentation for bsc agriculture honsFood processing presentation for bsc agriculture hons
Food processing presentation for bsc agriculture honsManeerUddin
 
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY - GERBNER.pptx
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY -  GERBNER.pptxAUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY -  GERBNER.pptx
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY - GERBNER.pptxiammrhaywood
 
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationActivity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationRosabel UA
 
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPHow to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
 

Recently uploaded (20)

ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
ANG SEKTOR NG agrikultura.pptx QUARTER 4
 
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
4.16.24 Poverty and Precarity--Desmond.pptx
 
YOUVE GOT EMAIL_FINALS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
YOUVE GOT EMAIL_FINALS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptxYOUVE GOT EMAIL_FINALS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
YOUVE GOT EMAIL_FINALS_EL_DORADO_2024.pptx
 
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfActive Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
 
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
 
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
How to Add Barcode on PDF Report in Odoo 17
 
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptxINTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLIC CHRISTOLOGY.pptx
 
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
4.18.24 Movement Legacies, Reflection, and Review.pptx
 
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
ENG 5 Q4 WEEk 1 DAY 1 Restate sentences heard in one’s own words. Use appropr...
 
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdfICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
ICS2208 Lecture6 Notes for SL spaces.pdf
 
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptxBarangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
Barangay Council for the Protection of Children (BCPC) Orientation.pptx
 
What is Model Inheritance in Odoo 17 ERP
What is Model Inheritance in Odoo 17 ERPWhat is Model Inheritance in Odoo 17 ERP
What is Model Inheritance in Odoo 17 ERP
 
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
Student Profile Sample - We help schools to connect the data they have, with ...
 
Visit to a blind student's school🧑‍🦯🧑‍🦯(community medicine)
Visit to a blind student's school🧑‍🦯🧑‍🦯(community medicine)Visit to a blind student's school🧑‍🦯🧑‍🦯(community medicine)
Visit to a blind student's school🧑‍🦯🧑‍🦯(community medicine)
 
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptxKarra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
Karra SKD Conference Presentation Revised.pptx
 
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for ParentsChoosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
 
Food processing presentation for bsc agriculture hons
Food processing presentation for bsc agriculture honsFood processing presentation for bsc agriculture hons
Food processing presentation for bsc agriculture hons
 
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY - GERBNER.pptx
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY -  GERBNER.pptxAUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY -  GERBNER.pptx
AUDIENCE THEORY -CULTIVATION THEORY - GERBNER.pptx
 
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translationActivity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
Activity 2-unit 2-update 2024. English translation
 
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPHow to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
 

Dissident thought

  • 1. Dissident ThoughtMichael A. Peters University of Waikato University of Illinois 2016
  • 2. Dissent and Negation as a Condition of Discourse Each society has its regime of truth, its ‘general politics’ of truth: that is, the type of discourse which it accepts and makes function as true --Foucault
  • 4. Dissident thought is that which takes place against conformism and consensus in the name of the good of society. Everywhere the structures of repression of the dominant group against minorities, of racial, sexual and gender violence, of state totalitarianism against the citizen, engender sparks of dissidence that leads to a person, movement, literature, discourse or a form of scholarship that actively challenges an established doctrine, policy, law or institution to call out against unlawful violations of free speech and “human rights.”
  • 6. Anthropology of dissidence It is a critical principle of science, politics and discourse. It may be an underground activity that exposes the secrets and the contradictions of governments and subjects fellow citizens to moral triage in opposing the unjust, often resulting in hardship, punishment, exile and imprisonment. The anthropology of dissidence can both theorize and document the struggles on the ground in totalitarian Soviet Russia, East Europe or China or against the cultural imperialism of the West through the diverse activities of politics, theatre, literature or poetry.
  • 7. Samizdat “Samizdat (Russian: самизда́т; IPA: [səmɨzˈdat]) was a key form of dissident activity across the Soviet bloc in which individuals reproduced censored and underground publications by hand and passed the documents from reader to reader.” Self publishing Genres included literary, political, rellgious, nationalist Pasternak’s (1957) Dr Zhivago Solzhenitsyn’s (1962) One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich Bulgakov’s (1967) The Master & Margarita Havel’s (1987) The Power of the Powerless (how the communist regime creates dissidents of its ordinary citizens) Charter 77 – Manifesto of dissent for Czechoslovakia
  • 8. Self expression in a police state Russia – 200,000 readers earliest samizdat periodicals - Sintaksis (1959- 60),Boomerang (1960), Phoenix (1961) A Chronicle of Current Events (1968-1982) Other countries: Poland, Lithuania, Czechoslovakia, Iran, Germany (under military rule), China https://chronicle6883.wordpress.com/
  • 9. Tamizdat Russian literature published abroad to avoid censorship at home by authors living in Russia The word first used in the 1950s Originate with Aleksandr Herzen who established The Free Press in London in 1852 Main incident was Boris Pasternak’s difficulty of getting his novel Doktor Zhivago because of his descriptions of the October Revolution that were not in accordance with official Russian histriography. Writers were arrested subsequently for publishing abroad
  • 11. “A New Type of Intellectual: The Dissident”- Julia Kristeva Exile is already in itself a form of dissidence, since it involves uprooting oneself from a family, a country or a language…Exile is a way of surviving in the face of the dead father, which is the meaning of life, of stubbornly refusing to give in to the law of death… This ruthless and irreverent dismanlting of the workings of discourse, thought, and existence is …the work of a dissident. Such dissidence requires ceasely analysis, vigilance and the will to subversion, and therefore ncessarily enters into complicitt with other dissident practices in the modern Western world. For true dissidence today is perhaps simply what it has always been: thought.
  • 13. Dissident thought dissident thought as a form of public discourse and academic scholarship that is the consequence of outspoken public intellectuals who through their practice dissent and refuse the brutal and arbitrary application of power. Globalization has given birth to its own geographical and historical forms of protest, against “free trade,” “austerity,” tyrannical dictatorships, environmental degradation, finance capitalism and the greed of Wall St that led to the Global Financial Crisis.
  • 14. Ghandi and Freire The tradition of non-violence
  • 15. TruthOut http://www.truth-out.org/ The Public Intellectual Project Henry Girouxhttp://www.truth-out.org/public-intellectual- project
  • 16. Chinese dissidents Liu Xioabo – Charter 08 called for end of one-party rule, independent judiciary, freedom of association, free markets. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009 Li Zehou – an academic who called for Sinification of Western concepts of human and civil rights, and rule of law. Persecuted in the aftermath of 1989, now living in exile. Wei Jingsheng – Demcracy Wall Movement (1978-79) wh propsoed fifth modernization to Deng Xiaping’s four modernizations
  • 18. Julian Assange A netizen best known for Wikileaks https://wikileaks.org/inde x.en.html
  • 19. Green Dissidents & Activists Action, nonviolence, revolutionary action Earth Liberation Front (ELF): Animal Liberation Front (ALF): Revolutionary Cells – Animal Liberation Brigade (RCALB): Animal Rights Militia (ARM): Greenpeace
  • 20. Disagreement Dissident thought has a kinship relationship with the ecology of concepts that proceed from the concepts of dissent and the very possibility of disagreement as an inherent aspect of discourse. It has taken many different forms in relation to discourse thought and action, and encompassed and cultivated political norms associated with freedom of speech that allows the expression of opposition, protest, revolt, and the expression of anti-establishment thought that takes the form of civil disobedience, non-violent protest and sometimes revolutionary activity.
  • 21. Opposition has taken the form of the metaphysics of negation Negation is something that we do. It is typically a judgment that we make, a judgment that something is not the case, and it usually—albeit by no means exclusively— takes the form of a statement… Negations … are commonplace, in our lives and in our grammar, and they may well be a distinctive feature of human communication. Almost two decades ago Jon Barwise made the observation: “All human languages contain one or more mechanisms of a negative character; no animal communication does” (p. 247, my italics). Daniel Dahlstrom (2010)
  • 22. Wittgenstein, negation and the possibility of discourse Consider how Wittgenstein, with the Sheffer stroke, introduced a negation operation to generate all truth functions. Whether one analyzes knowledge claims as suitably justified or as reliable true beliefs, it hardly suffices to show that someone believes what is the case; for both epistemological theories, it must be shown that either the reasons an alleged knower has for his true belief or the behavior he exhibits rule out beliefs to the contrary. Thus, negation appears to be a primitive element of our processes of thinking and knowing anything (p. 248)
  • 23. Wittgenstein on rule-following our agreement in language should be thought of as historically extended and as remaining always open to challenges and transformations. And the open and changeable nature of our background consensus does affect the normativity of our practices: its fallibility, its lack of finality. Our normative assessments are never final and unrevisable. The correctness of our linguistic actions can always be challenged; our moves in language-games can always be normatively assessed in different ways. This openness to contestation is grounded in the openness to correction of our normative agency. Our language- games are not composed of moves whose correctness can be guaranteed once and for all; they are not activities that can be exempted from critical scrutiny. In other words, language-games are not self-justifying activities with absolute normative autonomy (p. 8) José Medina (2010)
  • 24. History of Dissidence The term dissidence is most often associated with Russian, Central and East European movements opposing the regime in the Soviet Union, beginning in the 1960s and culminating, perhaps, in the statement by Vaclav Havel (1985: 23): [Dissent] is a natural and inevitable consequence of the present historical phase of the [Communist] system it is haunting. It was born at a time, when this system, for a thousand reasons, can no longer base itself on the unadulterated, brutal, and arbitrary application of power, eliminating all expressions of nonconformity. What is more, the system has become so ossified politically that there is practically no way for such nonconformity to be implemented within its official structures
  • 28. Syria
  • 35. Māori Protests Parihaka "The Treaty is a Fraud" (early 1980s) Donna Awatere, Māori Sovereignty Bastion Point (1977-78) Raglan Golf Course 1975 Land March Pākaitore (1995) Whanganui tribes Takahue 1995 Huntly 1995 Te Mana Motuhake o Tuhoe Te Urupatu 2005 Anti-terror raids 2007
  • 36. Dissent as a Philosophy of Non- Agreement The abolition of dissent is insstitutionalized in a monological pedagogy that cultivates the production of pupils as ideology- receptacles.
  • 37. A political constant Dissent is structurally or formally enabled in political systems through opposition parties often accompanied by social or political activism and forms of civil disobedience organised by those called “dissidents”, where it is not entirely supressed and driven underground by repressive regimes. Dissent in this sense as a principle of public discourse in a democracy rests on and is dependent on freedom of thought framed by freedom of speech that enshrines the possibility of dissent as a useful working political methodology that enable the expression of dissenting ideas especially from minorities against a majority consensus.
  • 38. Kantian culture of criticism Dissent is also the living force that enables dissident thought to take the form of criticism beginning as textual commentary and leading to interpretation that opposes or takes its departure from established thought. In the modern sense criticism is born with the three Kantian critiques as inquiries into the very possibility of knowledge. Kant’s critique is an inquiry into the very possibility of knowledge and the capacity of human reason to be able to undertake it. a question with regard to the mode of self-legitimation of any project of knowledge: “in what way?” and “by what right?”
  • 39. Hegel, Marx and Critical Theory The “first generation” of critical theorists was largely occupied with the functional and conceptual re- qualification of Hegel’s dialectics. After Habermas, preference has been assigned to the understanding of the conditions of action coordination through the underpinning of the conditions of validity for speech-acts. The third generation, then, following the works of Honneth, turned back to Hegel’s philosophy and in particular to Hegel’s notion of “recognition” as a cognitive and pre-linguistic sphere grounding intersubjectivity. Claudio Corradetti
  • 40. The Nihil The nihil of Russian nihilism is also a form of negation. It is only one species of nihilism that dates back to the Greek philosopher Gorgias where negation was cultivated as an expression of meaninglessness. Typically nihilism takes a variety of forms: metaphysical (no objects), epistemological (only sketpicism), moral (no morality), existential (no intrinisic value) or political (no authority). Russian nihilism was a movement in the 1860s that rejected all political authority and sanction violence as a means of political change.
  • 41. Nietzsche & Heidegger The history of Western thought as Western metaphysics as the destruction of Being. The “no,” the “negation” inherent in this version of the nihil is a powerful source of dissent and of dissident thought disrupting the traditional hierarchy of values, challenging the self-aggrandising mythology used to buttress the timeless truths of the West, and through this negation opening up the West for an alternative set of futures. Nietzsche and Heidegger’s interpretation set out a new discursive game in philosophy that can talk of creation within a nonfoundational universe and it acts as a source of inspiration for Sartre, Deleuze, Derrida, Foucault, Vattimo, Rorty, Severino and many others
  • 42. Deleuze For me the most definitive of the French Nietzsche revival was Deleuze whose book Nietzsche and Philosophy (1962) paved the way for a concept of “dissident thought”, together with Foucault’s materialization of discourse and Roland Barthes’ nouvelle critique. Each of these proposed useful accounts of “dissident thought” that broadened and diversified the practice, ethos and institution of criticism. In each case the formal oppositional viewpoint is amplified and given new strength and direction. In this context “dissident thought” differs from the Enlightenment emphasis on consensus but looks to dissensus. It is not tuned to a convergence but exists only as a divergence and diversity of thought
  • 43. A Theory of Dissent in Jurisprudence Thomas Morawetz (1992) provides a Wittgensteinian understanding of the possibility of “disagreement” in jurisprudence.
  • 44. Against foundationist jurisprudence Morawetz explains the move from the old foundationalist jurisprudence motivated by the possibility of achieving a consensus on public values and social progress to a new sceptical and antifoundationalist jurisprudence that has fallen under the spell of philosophical arguments about language, truth and meaning, originating in Wittgenstein and played out by Richard Rorty in a rebuttal of “knowledge as accurate representation”.
  • 45. The New Jurisprudence The transition to the new jurisprudence takes place through three “destabilization arguments”: the moral argument destabilizes liberalism faith in public values through an assault on the objectivity of rights; “the conceptual argument impeaches ideological neutrality by uncovering multiple narratives and alternative voices that coexist in time and space and offer irreconcilable ways of ordering experience.
  • 46. Law as deliberative practice If Wittgenstein is right, and if philosophy "leaves everything as it is," then describing law as a deliberative practice can be neither conservative nor radical. The law itself, the deliberative practice that is law, will be conservative if the society is homogeneous or successfully repressive, if new voices and ways of thinking remain unrepresented. The law will be radical if society is heterogeneous and new ways of justifying and conceiving aims are continually given legal expression. The law will, furthermore, be liberal in Mill's sense whenever it is open to new ways of thinking, whenever judges recognize that their ways of reasoning and justifying, i.e. their stake, do not necessarily have hegemony (p. 456).
  • 47. Dissidence and Dissent in Political Life: The 1960’s counterculture Much of the organized radicalism appeared under the acceptable face of democratic socialism that had imbibed the principles of dissent from various forms of Western Marxism
  • 48. History of protest The history of dissident thought in the West and the meaning of opposition was part of the dialectics of the Cold War and the organized radicalism that took place in the 1950s to formulate an anti-Stalinist Left, a living embodiment of dissent based on the power of critique. The 1960s counterculture was not confined to the US or the West. Its radical underpinnings were in decolonization movements initiated by Gandhi’s philosophy of non- violence, the work of Fanon, Césaire, and other ”postcolonial” theorists
  • 49. Birth of Modern Radical Movements Radical movements in the post-war that began in the US and Europe, spread quickly to South America, the Eastern bloc and the Antipodes. The American civil rights movement under Martin Luther King Jr. initiated protest action to end the official segregation and disenfranchisement of African-Americans, and later produced radical groups such as Black Power movement, Black Panther Party and Black Muslims Postcolonialism’ was coming of age at least in the sense that many countries in Africa and Asia had recently received their independence and authors such as Frantz Fanon and Aimé Césaire, as well as the Harlem Renaissance poets, had been rediscovered.
  • 50. Mass protests The 1960s also heralded an age of mass protest against the Vietnam War and US foreign policy in the late 1960s which grew out of the 1950s “peace movement” and CND that radicalized a generation of student-youth, based mostly in universities The 1960s became synonymous with emergent, novel and experimental cultural forms, especially revolving popular music and the rapid growth of ‘oppositional’ and ‘defiant’ youth subcultures.
  • 51. Global Non-violent Action Database Maori resistance to British land seizure at Parihaka, New Zealand, 1879-81 “Te Whiti was one of the most remarkable of the Maori prophetic figures of the nineteenth century. He provided leadership to his people in establishing a model community at Parihaka and enabled them by non-violent means to protest at the unjust confiscation of their lands. Furthermore, this was 60 years before Mahatma Gandhi in India.” Māori struggles and the TPPA, 2016
  • 52. Dissident Postmodern Fiction Dissident tendency in the work of Barthelme, Coover, Pynchon, Burroughs, DeLillio, Acker and Reed Introverted tendency in Nabokov, Gass and Barth “embodies that enlarged notion of the political within the sphere of language…” (p, 529) “the ‘real’ …does not speak for itself, and the search for meaning, the endeavour to intrepret the world, is perceived as a process of fictionalizing reality, of ‘storifying’ it” (p. 530) ‘Postmodern Practices’, Paul Maltby in A Postmodern Reader, Joseph Natoli & Linda Hutcheon (1993)
  • 53. Waves of Global Resistance In a strong sense this first global movement of dissidence based on the export of countercultural youth styles around the globe also set the condition and tone for the second and third global movements: the anti-capitalist and anti- globalization struggles of 1990s and 2000s, a kind of rainbow coalition with a strong ecology and sustainability orientation, and; the movement of cyberactivism that grew from the hacker cultures of the 1960s (Levy, 1984) dedicated to the principle of free information to its maturity in the work of Richard Stallman and Linus Torvalds, as intellectual leaders of the openness movement.
  • 54. Research Group on International Studies Globalization, post-9/11 politics and the post-2008 financial crisis have all birthed modes and histories of opposition and dissent, be they dissent from global political-economic systems or opposition to ranges of international authoritarian regimes. Contemporary dissent, however, oft-draws from forms and imaginations of earlier modes of protest, be they student protests from the late ‘60s onward, the peace movement in the same period, the anti-nukes movement of the 1980s or the anti-Apartheid movement spanning the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s. Still, dissent takes other historical forms: individual critiques of “actually existing” socialist systems, be they civil rights based critique from individual figures such as Sakharov or Rostropovich (or Solzhenitsyn’s nationalist-culturalism), media-driven dissent, such as the political magazine Mladina’s criticisms of the Yugoslav regime in the late 1980s and early 1990s or the voices of “everyday” social actors, such as the Damas de Blanco in Cuba. In a historical period encapsulating the last decades of the Cold War and an unfolding twenty-first century, dissent and social opposition undergo and have undergone redefinition within the confines of modern and contemporary culture.
  • 55. The epoch of digital reason In the epoch of digital reason (Peters, 2014) in what ways is resistance possible within the global mode of digital governmentality that subjects us to new horizontal and democratic forms of control where self-surveillance parallels the digital panopticon of big data systems and surveillance technologies both the State and the digital multinational corporation?
  • 56. Frédéric Gros Foucault's great studies of disciplinary society are useful above all because they allow us to delineate, through contrast and comparison, the digital governmentality that subjects us to new forms of control, which are less vertical, more democratic and, above all, no longer burdened by any anthropological ballast. Homo digitalis today participates in, is the primary agent of, the surveillance of himself. Digital society is becoming a form of mutualised control. We should today consider the treatment of 'big data' working with Foucault, basing ourselves on him, but seeing further than he could. Because we have gone well beyond the disciplinary age. Security's new concepts are no longer imprisoning individuals and normative consciousness, but rather traceability and algorithmic profiling.
  • 57. New forms of dissidence In these new forms of dissidence that increasingly define prodemocracy, ecological movements, and cyberactivism, political subjectivity depends on the global linking of autonomous cells and regional networks in transversal and rhizomic structures that favour horizontal, non-hierarchical and transspecies connections. These networks of hope are the emergent counter-practices and counter-conducts that speak truth to power in the emergent interconnected digital world that is now our home.
  • 58. The Dissident Blog publishes what the rulers want to delete It has never been so easy to publish or make your voice heard as it is today. Through websites, blogs and social media people all around the worldhave been given new opportunities to freely spread their words. However, at the same time as new doors have opened totalitarian regimes are slowly but surely trying to censor new digital media. Blogs that contains uncomfortable truths are shut down and writers are silenced by intimidation and reprisals. New grids have fallen over the Internet as censors try to keep pace with technological developments. Swedish PEN’s The Dissident Blog wants to present the forbidden texts—the ones that can neither be written nor published in the writers’ own countries. We want to give these texts both a Swedish and an international audience. https://www.dissidentblog.org/
  • 59. Appendix: List of Dissident Websites http://aidswiki.net/index.php/List_of_di ssident_websites Information Resources Support, Service and Activist Organisations Blogs and discussion groups Websites of individual dissidents Books Audio and film/video media Other relevant links

Editor's Notes

  1. The gestures of refusal: Sraffa to Wittgenstein: What the logical form of that?