Tag: Protest

Structures of Feeling and COVID-19 in America with Karl Nycklemoe

Three images encapsulate two entwined structures of feeling that emerged in the United States during the continuing COVID-19 pandemic, the presence of the facemask and the presence of absence [1]. The direction and future of these structures of feeling—and the pandemic—is unknown. However, these structures of feeling can help us unpack the meaning of the pandemic as we move forward to whatever the future may bring.

The pandemic has politicized the facemask, transforming an effective, traditional tool in health and medicine into a political statement. One form of the politicization of the facemask has already been exhaustively covered in the daily news cycle and social media; antimaskers place individual autonomy dis-engaged from community responsibility over the health of the nation, genuine civic engagement, and scientific evidence. However, wearing the facemask is more than a political statement on responsibility, science, and health, as its political symbology has also been integrated into protest and activism against police brutality:

A couple wears masks that read “I Can’t Breathe” during a demonstration in Minneapolis on Saturday. Jim Urquhart for NPR

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Return to Normalcy by Eric Zolov

In the fall of 2019, during my Fulbright Fellowship in Chile, which coincided with a social revolution that continues to reverberate across Chilean society, a large graffiti-mural caught my attention along a wall in downtown Santiago: “Tu normalidad es privilegio!”

Photograph by Eric Zolov

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Looking Back at Forms of Protest During the Colonial Period with Baylee Browning-Atkinson. Part 3: Challenging Relationships of Authority and Deference: New Jersey Land Riots and the Leisler Rebellion

In the third installment of this series we will be looking at two examples of colonists challenging established relationships of authority and the deferential society of the early colonial period through the New Jersey Land Riots and Leisler’s Rebellion.  Before we talk about the specific challenges to authority it is important to understand what it was to have public power in the early colonial period.  As I have come to understand it, power and authority were generally acknowledged by an unspoken social contract.  Early colonial society was very deferential.  Authority was given to those of a higher social standing with the accompanying wealth and connections because it was believed that those who had no material wants were more detached from their own needs and could thus concern themselves with the interests of the commonweal.  If a public figure was not acting in the interests of the public good then the people had the prerogative to express their dissatisfaction and remind the offending figure of the duty their privilege conveyed.

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Looking Back at Forms of Protest During the Colonial Period with Baylee Browning-Atkinson. Part 2: Commercial Protest, Merchants and Consumers.

Today we will be looking at some forms of protest and dissent which colonial merchants and consumers engaged in, as well as some interesting incidents that followed.  After the French and Indian War, or the Seven Years War as it was known globally, the British Parliament passed a series of acts imposing taxes and importation duties on food and material goods in an effort to pay for the war and future defense of the colonies.  Years of inconsistent, unenforceable, and incomprehensible policies established a loose, laissez faire style of colonial governance that was very favorable to the colonies.  Many in the economic, merchant, and supply occupations prospered and contributed, through their trades, to the relatively higher quality of life and opportunities in the colonies as a whole.  As a result, a majority of the colonists were resentful of the efforts of such men as the British Chancellor of the Exchequer Charles Townshend to reassert imperial control over the economy and governance of the colonies.  So, how did colonists voice their discontent with imperial policy?  Let’s get into it.

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Looking Back at Forms of Protest During the Colonial Period with Baylee Browning-Atkinson. Part One: Methods of Resisting Enslavement and the 1741 Slave Uprising Conspiracy.

Immediately following the murder of Mr. George Floyd Americans took to the streets to voice their support, sorrow, frustration, anger, and disappointment in a manner and magnitude that people of my generation have not seen, and America has not seen, since the Civil Rights era.  In the midst of a global pandemic no less!  Current events have me thinking back to our early beginnings as a collection of provincial colonies clustered along the North American coast.  The First Amendment protects our most valuable rights: religion, speech, and the ability to protect these rights through peaceful assembly and petition.

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