The Spirit of Gezi: The Recomposition of Political Subjectivities in Turkey

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The Spirit of Gezi: The Recomposition of Political Subjectivities in Turkey. / Karakayali, Serhat; Yaka, Özge.
In: New Formations, Vol. 2014, No. 83, 20.12.2014, p. 117-138.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Karakayali S, Yaka Ö. The Spirit of Gezi: The Recomposition of Political Subjectivities in Turkey. New Formations. 2014 Dec 20;2014(83):117-138. doi: 10.3898/NEWf.83.07.2014

Bibtex

@article{5a01db5973454230a9802b3f1a5ad2df,
title = "The Spirit of Gezi: The Recomposition of Political Subjectivities in Turkey",
abstract = "In the last few years, a sequence of protests and uprisings occurred across the planet from the student's movement in Chile, to the Egyptian revolution, the Spanish Indignados, Occupy Wall Street up to the Gezi Park protest in Turkey. Despite their respective singularity these events seem to reveal new practices and forms of political subjectivity. The paper focuses on three aspects by analysing the recent Turkish case, the Gezi Park protests. Firstly, it explores what the authors call the process of 'recomposition of people', which is connected to the emergence of new subjectivities and social practices, and eventually to the emergence of new norms, as indicated by the pervasive reference to the 'Spirit of Gezi'. Secondly it discusses the virtually classical phenomenon of emergence by examining infrastructures and practices of 'commoning', which created what many participants of the protests lived as a transgressive experience. Thirdly, drawing on a Spinozan theoretical framework, the authors investigate the affective dimensions of the Gezi protest, emphasising the transformative role played by humour during the uprising.",
keywords = "Sociology, commoning, event, humour, protest, recomposition, transformative practices",
author = "Serhat Karakayali and {\"O}zge Yaka",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
day = "20",
doi = "10.3898/NEWf.83.07.2014",
language = "English",
volume = "2014",
pages = "117--138",
journal = "New Formations",
issn = "0950-2378",
publisher = "Lawrence Wishart",
number = "83",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Spirit of Gezi

T2 - The Recomposition of Political Subjectivities in Turkey

AU - Karakayali, Serhat

AU - Yaka, Özge

PY - 2014/12/20

Y1 - 2014/12/20

N2 - In the last few years, a sequence of protests and uprisings occurred across the planet from the student's movement in Chile, to the Egyptian revolution, the Spanish Indignados, Occupy Wall Street up to the Gezi Park protest in Turkey. Despite their respective singularity these events seem to reveal new practices and forms of political subjectivity. The paper focuses on three aspects by analysing the recent Turkish case, the Gezi Park protests. Firstly, it explores what the authors call the process of 'recomposition of people', which is connected to the emergence of new subjectivities and social practices, and eventually to the emergence of new norms, as indicated by the pervasive reference to the 'Spirit of Gezi'. Secondly it discusses the virtually classical phenomenon of emergence by examining infrastructures and practices of 'commoning', which created what many participants of the protests lived as a transgressive experience. Thirdly, drawing on a Spinozan theoretical framework, the authors investigate the affective dimensions of the Gezi protest, emphasising the transformative role played by humour during the uprising.

AB - In the last few years, a sequence of protests and uprisings occurred across the planet from the student's movement in Chile, to the Egyptian revolution, the Spanish Indignados, Occupy Wall Street up to the Gezi Park protest in Turkey. Despite their respective singularity these events seem to reveal new practices and forms of political subjectivity. The paper focuses on three aspects by analysing the recent Turkish case, the Gezi Park protests. Firstly, it explores what the authors call the process of 'recomposition of people', which is connected to the emergence of new subjectivities and social practices, and eventually to the emergence of new norms, as indicated by the pervasive reference to the 'Spirit of Gezi'. Secondly it discusses the virtually classical phenomenon of emergence by examining infrastructures and practices of 'commoning', which created what many participants of the protests lived as a transgressive experience. Thirdly, drawing on a Spinozan theoretical framework, the authors investigate the affective dimensions of the Gezi protest, emphasising the transformative role played by humour during the uprising.

KW - Sociology

KW - commoning

KW - event

KW - humour

KW - protest

KW - recomposition

KW - transformative practices

U2 - 10.3898/NEWf.83.07.2014

DO - 10.3898/NEWf.83.07.2014

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 2014

SP - 117

EP - 138

JO - New Formations

JF - New Formations

SN - 0950-2378

IS - 83

ER -