Renewing Radical and Revolutionary Political Strategies: a reflection on sense and nonsense
- š¤ Speaker: Chris Rogers (Warwick University; author of āAlternatives to Capitalismā (2014))
- š Date & Time: Monday 02 March 2015, 17:00 - 18:30
- š Venue: Sociology Department Committee Room, Free School Lane
Abstract
The paper reflects on varying ways in which the dominance of capitalist social relations has been āperformedā, and radical or revolutionary political strategies stifled as a result. In particular, it reflects on the way in which accusations of co-option by capitalist interests have been levelled at radical movements and the way in which autonomous forms of social and economic organisation that emerge in the interstices of capitalist social relations are criticised as insignificant or unsustainable. I suggest that these critiques are nonsense and perform capitalist dominance in two ways. First, they are contingent on contested theoretical positions that have directed debate from the practical to the academic. Second, because mainstream political discourses that deride alternative ānorm entrepreneursā as either quacks or hypocrites deny the possibility of social change and erroneously suggest the significance of an individualās critique is contingent on their social status. The paper illustrates the ways in which nonsense of this kind has affected recent revolutionary political movements, including Occupy, and tentatively suggests ways it might be escaped
ALL ARE WELCOME
Organisers: Jeff Miley and David Lane
Series This talk is part of the Department of Sociology Seminar Series series.
Included in Lists
- Department of Sociology Seminar Series
- Gem's List
- jer64's list
- Sociology Department Committee Room, Free School Lane
Note: Ex-directory lists are not shown.
![[Talks.cam]](/static/images/talkslogosmall.gif)

Chris Rogers (Warwick University; author of āAlternatives to Capitalismā (2014))
Monday 02 March 2015, 17:00-18:30