The SAGE Handbook of Resistance
October 2016 | 530 pages | Sage UK
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Hardcover
ISBN: 9781473906433
Available from January 0001

Description

Chosen by Library Journal as one of the best reference texts of 2016. 

Occupy. Indignados. The Tea Party. The Arab Spring. Anonymous. These and other terms have become part of an emerging lexicon in recent years, signalling an important development that has gripped many parts of the world: millions of people are increasingly involved, whether directly or indirectly, in movements of resistance and protestation.

However, resistance and its conceptual "companions”, protest, contestation, opposition, disobedience and mobilization, all seem to be still mostly seen in public and private discourses as illegitimate and problematic forms of action. The time is, therefore, ripe to delve into the concerns, themes and legitimacy.

The SAGE Handbook of Resistance offers theoretical essays enabling readers to forge their own perspectives of what “is” resistance and emphasizes the empirical and experiential dimension of resistance - making strong choices in terms of how contemporary topics related to resistance help to rethink our societies as “protest societies”. The coverage is divided into six key sub-sections:  
  • Foundations
  • Sites of Resistance
  • Technologies of Resistance
  • Languages of Resistance
  • Geographies of Resistance
  • Consequences of Resistance

Contents

Resistance Studies: A Critical Introduction

Resistance Studies: A Critical Introduction

PART ONE: FOUNDATIONS

  • Chapter 1: Globalization, Resistance, and Social Transformation
  • Chapter 2: Emerging Subjectivity in Protest
  • Chapter 3: Islam: Fundamentalism and Insurgency in the Arab Spring
  • Chapter 4: The Grand Refusal?: Struggling with Alternative Foucauldian-Inspired Approaches to Resistance at Work
  • Chapter 5: Resisting the 24/7 Work Ethic – Shifting Modes of Regulation and Refusal in Organized Employment

PART TWO: SITES OF RESISTANCE

  • Chapter 6: The Body as a Site of Resistance
  • Chapter 7: The Complexities and Contradictions of Resistance: An Intersectional Perspective
  • Chapter 8: Individual Constraint and Group Solidarity: Marginalized Mothers and the Paradox of Family Responsibility
  • Chapter 9: Protecting Our Children: Paradoxes of Resistance in an Era of Neoliberal Education
  • Chapter 10: Resistance in Organizational Strategy-Making
  • Chapter 11: Prisons as Sites of Power and Resistance

PART THREE: TECHNOLOGIES OF POWER AND RESISTANCE

  • Chapter 12: Recasting Community for Online Resisting Work
  • Chapter 13: Between Grassroots and ‘Astroturf’: Understanding Mobilization from the Top-down
  • Chapter 14: From Digital Tools to Political Infrastructure
  • Chapter 15: Resisting the New: On Cooptation and the Organisational Conditions for Entrepreneurship

PART FOUR: LANGUAGES OF RESISTANCE

  • Chapter 16: Musical Style, Youth Subcultures, and Cultural Resistance
  • Chapter 17: Graffitti as Infrapolitics: A Study of Visual Interventions of Resistance in San Francisco
  • Chapter 18: Naming, Shaming, Changing the World
  • Chapter 19: Contesting Authority in a Moralized Market: The Case of a Catholic Hospital Unionization Campaign
  • Chapter 20: Organizational Change and Resistance: An Identity Perspective

PART FIVE: GEOGRAPHIES OF RESISTANCE

  • Chapter 21: The World Social Forum and Global Resistance: The Trajectory of an Activist Open Space
  • Chapter 22: Back to Work: Resisting Clientelism in a Poor Neighborhood of Buenos Aires
  • Chapter 23: Bases of Governance and Forms of Resistance: The Case of Rural China
  • Chapter 24: Resistance and its Pitfalls: Analyzing NGO and Civil Society Politics in Bangladesh
  • Chapter 25: Urban Gardening: Between Green Resistance and Ideological Instrument
  • Higher education
  • Test entry

Description

Chosen by Library Journal as one of the best reference texts of 2016. 

Occupy. Indignados. The Tea Party. The Arab Spring. Anonymous. These and other terms have become part of an emerging lexicon in recent years, signalling an important development that has gripped many parts of the world: millions of people are increasingly involved, whether directly or indirectly, in movements of resistance and protestation.

However, resistance and its conceptual "companions”, protest, contestation, opposition, disobedience and mobilization, all seem to be still mostly seen in public and private discourses as illegitimate and problematic forms of action. The time is, therefore, ripe to delve into the concerns, themes and legitimacy.

The SAGE Handbook of Resistance offers theoretical essays enabling readers to forge their own perspectives of what “is” resistance and emphasizes the empirical and experiential dimension of resistance - making strong choices in terms of how contemporary topics related to resistance help to rethink our societies as “protest societies”. The coverage is divided into six key sub-sections:  
  • Foundations
  • Sites of Resistance
  • Technologies of Resistance
  • Languages of Resistance
  • Geographies of Resistance
  • Consequences of Resistance

Contents

Resistance Studies: A Critical Introduction

Resistance Studies: A Critical Introduction

PART ONE: FOUNDATIONS

  • Chapter 1: Globalization, Resistance, and Social Transformation
  • Chapter 2: Emerging Subjectivity in Protest
  • Chapter 3: Islam: Fundamentalism and Insurgency in the Arab Spring
  • Chapter 4: The Grand Refusal?: Struggling with Alternative Foucauldian-Inspired Approaches to Resistance at Work
  • Chapter 5: Resisting the 24/7 Work Ethic – Shifting Modes of Regulation and Refusal in Organized Employment

PART TWO: SITES OF RESISTANCE

  • Chapter 6: The Body as a Site of Resistance
  • Chapter 7: The Complexities and Contradictions of Resistance: An Intersectional Perspective
  • Chapter 8: Individual Constraint and Group Solidarity: Marginalized Mothers and the Paradox of Family Responsibility
  • Chapter 9: Protecting Our Children: Paradoxes of Resistance in an Era of Neoliberal Education
  • Chapter 10: Resistance in Organizational Strategy-Making
  • Chapter 11: Prisons as Sites of Power and Resistance

PART THREE: TECHNOLOGIES OF POWER AND RESISTANCE

  • Chapter 12: Recasting Community for Online Resisting Work
  • Chapter 13: Between Grassroots and ‘Astroturf’: Understanding Mobilization from the Top-down
  • Chapter 14: From Digital Tools to Political Infrastructure
  • Chapter 15: Resisting the New: On Cooptation and the Organisational Conditions for Entrepreneurship

PART FOUR: LANGUAGES OF RESISTANCE

  • Chapter 16: Musical Style, Youth Subcultures, and Cultural Resistance
  • Chapter 17: Graffitti as Infrapolitics: A Study of Visual Interventions of Resistance in San Francisco
  • Chapter 18: Naming, Shaming, Changing the World
  • Chapter 19: Contesting Authority in a Moralized Market: The Case of a Catholic Hospital Unionization Campaign
  • Chapter 20: Organizational Change and Resistance: An Identity Perspective

PART FIVE: GEOGRAPHIES OF RESISTANCE

  • Chapter 21: The World Social Forum and Global Resistance: The Trajectory of an Activist Open Space
  • Chapter 22: Back to Work: Resisting Clientelism in a Poor Neighborhood of Buenos Aires
  • Chapter 23: Bases of Governance and Forms of Resistance: The Case of Rural China
  • Chapter 24: Resistance and its Pitfalls: Analyzing NGO and Civil Society Politics in Bangladesh
  • Chapter 25: Urban Gardening: Between Green Resistance and Ideological Instrument
  • Higher education
  • Test entry
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The SAGE Handbook of Resistance


October 2016 | 530 pages | Sage UK

Format Published Date ISBN Price
Hardcover 31/03/2026 9781473906433 $220.00

Chosen by Library Journal as one of the best reference texts of 2016. 

Occupy. Indignados. The Tea Party. The Arab Spring. Anonymous. These and other terms have become part of an emerging lexicon in recent years, signalling an important development that has gripped many parts of the world: millions of people are increasingly involved, whether directly or indirectly, in movements of resistance and protestation.

However, resistance and its conceptual "companions”, protest, contestation, opposition, disobedience and mobilization, all seem to be still mostly seen in public and private discourses as illegitimate and problematic forms of action. The time is, therefore, ripe to delve into the concerns, themes and legitimacy.

The SAGE Handbook of Resistance offers theoretical essays enabling readers to forge their own perspectives of what “is” resistance and emphasizes the empirical and experiential dimension of resistance - making strong choices in terms of how contemporary topics related to resistance help to rethink our societies as “protest societies”. The coverage is divided into six key sub-sections:  
  • Foundations
  • Sites of Resistance
  • Technologies of Resistance
  • Languages of Resistance
  • Geographies of Resistance
  • Consequences of Resistance

Table Of Contents:

  • Resistance Studies: A Critical Introduction
  • PART ONE: FOUNDATIONS
  • Chapter 1: Globalization, Resistance, and Social Transformation
  • Chapter 2: Emerging Subjectivity in Protest
  • Chapter 3: Islam: Fundamentalism and Insurgency in the Arab Spring
  • Chapter 4: The Grand Refusal?: Struggling with Alternative Foucauldian-Inspired Approaches to Resistance at Work
  • Chapter 5: Resisting the 24/7 Work Ethic – Shifting Modes of Regulation and Refusal in Organized Employment
  • PART TWO: SITES OF RESISTANCE
  • Chapter 6: The Body as a Site of Resistance
  • Chapter 7: The Complexities and Contradictions of Resistance: An Intersectional Perspective
  • Chapter 8: Individual Constraint and Group Solidarity: Marginalized Mothers and the Paradox of Family Responsibility
  • Chapter 9: Protecting Our Children: Paradoxes of Resistance in an Era of Neoliberal Education
  • Chapter 10: Resistance in Organizational Strategy-Making
  • Chapter 11: Prisons as Sites of Power and Resistance
  • PART THREE: TECHNOLOGIES OF POWER AND RESISTANCE
  • Chapter 12: Recasting Community for Online Resisting Work
  • Chapter 13: Between Grassroots and ‘Astroturf’: Understanding Mobilization from the Top-down
  • Chapter 14: From Digital Tools to Political Infrastructure
  • Chapter 15: Resisting the New: On Cooptation and the Organisational Conditions for Entrepreneurship
  • PART FOUR: LANGUAGES OF RESISTANCE
  • Chapter 16: Musical Style, Youth Subcultures, and Cultural Resistance
  • Chapter 17: Graffitti as Infrapolitics: A Study of Visual Interventions of Resistance in San Francisco
  • Chapter 18: Naming, Shaming, Changing the World
  • Chapter 19: Contesting Authority in a Moralized Market: The Case of a Catholic Hospital Unionization Campaign
  • Chapter 20: Organizational Change and Resistance: An Identity Perspective
  • PART FIVE: GEOGRAPHIES OF RESISTANCE
  • Chapter 21: The World Social Forum and Global Resistance: The Trajectory of an Activist Open Space
  • Chapter 22: Back to Work: Resisting Clientelism in a Poor Neighborhood of Buenos Aires
  • Chapter 23: Bases of Governance and Forms of Resistance: The Case of Rural China
  • Chapter 24: Resistance and its Pitfalls: Analyzing NGO and Civil Society Politics in Bangladesh
  • Chapter 25: Urban Gardening: Between Green Resistance and Ideological Instrument
  • Higher education
  • Test entry

Recent Product Reviews:

Resistance takes many forms, and is aimed in many directions. The editors have given us a powerful new language for grasping this diversity by cleverly dividing the handbook into foundations, sites, technologies, languages, and geographies of resistance. This book should attract wide attention and will reverberate across many disciplines.
James M. Jasper, Graduate Center of the City University of New York
The Editors have assembled a collection of expert articles traversing sources in time and space on what it is to ‘resist’. These argue that resistance studies is an interdisciplinary area looking, in part, at ‘the art of the weak’, ‘the weapons of the weak’, ‘style warfare’, ‘the great refusal’, ‘inaction’, and ‘rebellion’. On (or perhaps in) the other hand, there is a consideration of ‘co-optation’, ‘accommodation’ and ‘commodification’ as all equally associated with resistance. The articles move through different depths of visibility e.g. resistance is ‘underground’, ‘rhizomatic’, ‘grass roots’, ‘astroturf’ or as fully ‘out in the open’. But all are aware of the context-specific nature of resistance in a major text that will illuminate many contemporary features of a world in which power differentials appear to be increasing and where the 1% may yet come to fear a call from a resistant mob armed with pitchforks.
Gibson Burrell, Professor of Organisation Theory, Universities of Leicester and Manchester
Resistance is the new normal. Anti-elite resistance in politics, both nationally as in Brexit and organisationally, in the role of Trump and Corbyn in their respective parties as well as in social movements globally and in the interstices of organisations that seem increasingly out of kilter with the spirit of the times is a major contemporary phenomenon. While no relations of power are ever alike that are resisted and no resistance follows universal scripts – both power and resistance are highly contextual – the Handbook of Resistance offers an invaluable resource understanding the dialectical relations of power and resistance theoretically and through many insightful empirical analyses. I recommend it as essential reading for the social sciences.
Stewart Clegg, Professor of Management and Research Director of the Centre for Organization and Management Studies, University of Technology, Sydney Business School
In conceiving and making available this rich interdisciplinary and globally-oriented handbook, Courpasson and Vallas are doing a great service to social scientists committed to social change. This book is an important resource that should become widely used and widely referenced.
Michele Lamont, Professor of Sociology and African and African American Studies, Harvard University

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