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DescriptionRelease date: September 18, 2012 In the wake of the global financial crisis, new forms of social organization and value production are appearing. People are coming together in order to resist corporate globalization, creating an alternative way forward. In the West, this has been demonstrated by the recent and remarkable rise of the Occupy movement, but in Argentina, such radical transformations have been taking place for years. Factory workers and medical technicians are running their workplaces, themselves, without bosses. People have taken over land to build homes and schools, raise livestock and grow crops, creating their own art and media in the process. Everyday Revolutions tells the story of how regular people changed their country and inspired others across the world. Marina Sitrin shows how an economic crisis spurred a people's rebellion. How factory workers and medical clinic technicians are running their workplaces themselves, without bosses. How people have taken over land to build homes, raise livestock, grow crops and build schools, creating their own art and media in the process. In doing so, these new movements have created new forms of social organization - such as "horizontalism" and "autogestion" - that serve as instructive examples for activists the world over. Dynamic and groundbreaking, Everyday Revolutions shows how the experiences of the autonomous movements in Argentina can help answer the question of how to turn a rupture into a revolution. Review "In the last decade, few things have inspired and influenced me more than Marina Sitrin's reports from Argentina." - Rebecca Solnit, author of A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster and Hope in the Dark. "This is a timely and inspiring book whose ideas spill over from the streets of Buenos Aires into Tahrir Square, Zuccotti Park, Sintagma and Plaza del Sol. Just the discussion we need." - John Holloway, author of Change the World Without Taking Power "Sitrin shows us that something new and global is taking hold in democratic politics, moving beyond the nation-state system. Her knowledge is deep…and gives us reason for hope." - Susan Buck-Morss, Professor of Political Science at the CUNY Graduate Center, author of Hegel, Haiti, and Universal History "Everyday Revolutions...contributes to our being able to visualize revolution, not as something to accomplish one day, far in the distance, and in the place of presidential palaces, but instead in the daily life of regular people." - Raul Zibechi, Uruguay, activist, writer and researcher of social movements. Author of, Dispersing Power: Movements as Anti-State Powers and Territories of Resistance: Urban Periphery in Latin America. "Most books do not have the good fortune to be published exactly at the time when they are most needed. Everyday Revolutions has that distinction." - Silvia Federici, Hofstra University, NY, author of Caliban and the Witch: Women the Body and Primitive Accumulation and Revolution at Point Zero: Housework, Reproduction and Feminist Struggle. "Everyday Revolutions provides a richly detailed, insightful, and inspiring account of the full array of social movements that emerged out of the Argentine economic meltdown of late 2001...Sitrin vividly portrays the prefigurative, affective politics and novel practices of horizontalism, autonomy and 'auto-gestión' or self-management that characterized Argentina's popular rebellion and the movements of unemployed workers, recuperated factories, neighborhood assemblies and barter clubs that proliferated in its aftermath. Like many of today's mass protest actions, occupations, and encampments, the movement formations exhaustively documented in this book advance innovative modalities of social and economic relations, citizen action, and radical politics, aptly captured in the recuperated factories' motto 'Occupy, Resist, Produce.' Analyzing the accomplishments as well as contradictions that typify such radical experiments, this book offers powerful insights for activists and scholars alike." - Sonia E. Alvarez, Leonard J. Horwitz Professor of Latin American Politics and Society University of Massachusetts, Amherst and author of Engendering Democracy in Brazil: Women's Movements in Transition Politics and co-editor of The Making Of Social Movements In Latin America: Identity, Strategy, And Democracy. "This is the book we need to begin to understand the new era of revolutionary change inaugurated by the Zapatistas in 1994 and now exploding everywhere." - Gustavo Esteva, Universidad de la Tierra, Oaxaca Mexico, and author of The Commune of Oaxaca. "Looking at the recent history of some of the most interesting social movements in recent years, Everyday Revolutions speaks of things that are happening here and now…Through a close reading of certain vectors of change that have crossed the Argentine political space in recent decades, this book provides conceptual tools which are very helpful when thinking about how to transform the material conditions that shape our lives." - Ana Méndez de Andés, an architect and urbanist, is a part of the research project, Observatorio Metropolitano de Madrid and Traficantes de Sueños. She also teaches at the European University of Madrid. "Everyday Revolutions engages with the central questions movements for change face all over the world: local self organization, autogestion, affective politics and horizontal organizing. Sitrin delves deeply into the questions most books about movements avoid or simplify far too much, such as the question of production or the complex relation with the state. Everyday Revolutions could only be written by a long time activist and researcher like Marina Sitrin who knows about the challenges we face." - Dario Azzellini, Johannes Kepler University Linz, author of Partizipation, Arbeiterkontrolle und die Commune and co-editor of Ours to Master and to Own: Workers Control from the Commune to the Present "Everyday Revolutions truly conveys not only what an affective politics is, but what this affective politics can do. Moving with the movements it both describes and analyses, this is not just a book, it is a companion on the journey through the worlds worth fighting for in the streets, squares, factories, fields, chat rooms and classrooms of our everyday lives." - Emma Dowling, Queen Mary, University of London. "A living history of a living revolution, Everyday Revolutions shows us how people in Argentina, not 'political' or 'activists,' but rather 'actors,' 'protagonists' and 'historical subjects,' are moving from fissures and cracks to creation. It shows us how these people are deepening the rupture of December 2001, changing themselves, changing society, changing the world - and leaving the state behind. Reading Everyday Revolutions we read of the emergence, the collective self-making, of new people. Beautiful!' - David Harvie, University of Leicester, author (with The Free Association) of Moments of Excess: Movement, Protest and Everyday Life and editor of Turbulence: Ideas for Movement. "Marina Sitrin has long been pioneering the kind of intellectual practice, that is now becoming more and more crucial, with its cherished sensitivity toward the struggling/questioning/thinking in common from which all revolutionary thoughts arise. With both passionate and rigorous analyses of Argentinian processes, her Everyday Revolutions embodies what theory can and should do today in the age of global insurgency." - Sabu Kohso, independent writer and translator "Essential reading for those trying to understand or enact the global movement for horizontal democracy."- Michael Schwartz, Professor of Sociology at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, author of War Without End: The Iraq War in Context and Radical Protest and Social Structure: The Southern Farmers' Alliance and Cotton Tenancy, 1880-1890. "At a promising moment when people in all over the world are seeking to reclaim their lives in the face of systems of power that have failed them, Marina Sitrin's smart and incisive analysis of horizontalism and autonomy in Argentina as an alternative form of not-power is a critical, timely, and lively contribution to understanding both why and how. Crackling with acuity, bits of history, and keen insights of a participant observer and social scientist, Sitrin joins those making an activist social science indispensable for those of us committed to both close, careful scholarship and passionate about social justice." - Eric Selbin, Professor of Political Science at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas , author of Revolution, Rebellion, and Resistance: The Power of Story and Modern Latin American Revolutions. "Marina Sitrin's feet are solidly planted in Argentina - and in this book she gives a wonderful introduction to the concepts and practices that have animated radical politics there for over a decade. But she is also able to reach up and, on the basis of the Argentine perspective, grasp the promise and importance of revolutionary activity elsewhere, from the encampments in Spain and Greece to the Occupy movements and beyond. The result is an inspiring and practical guide for understanding what revolutionary politics can be today." - Michael Hardt, Professor of Philosophy and Politics at the European Graduate School, Saas Fe, Switzerland and co-author with Antonio Negri of Declaration About the Author Marina A. Sitrin holds a PhD in Global Sociology and a JD in International Women's Human Rights. Her work focuses on social movements and justice, specifically looking at new forms of social organization, such as autogestión, horizontalidad, prefigurative politics, and new affective social relationships. Her first book, Horizontalism: Voices of Popular Power in Argentina, is an oral history based on the then emergent autonomous movements in Argentina, Spanish (Chilavert 2005) and English (AK Press 2006). She has published in a range of journals and books, from the International Journal of Contemporary Sociology to Znet, LeftTurn, and Yes! Magazine. While much of her most recent published work has been on the contemporary social movements in Argentina, she has worked throughout the Americas, Caribbean, and Japan. Her current research includes the global mass assembly movements, specifically in Greece, Spain, and Egypt. Product Details Paperback: 224 pages Publisher: Zed Books (September 18, 2012) Language: English ISBN-10: 1780320493 ISBN-13: 978-1780320496 Sharing Widget |