Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Feminism/Protest Camps
- Part I Gendered Power and Identities in Protest Camps
- Part II Feminist Politics in and through Protest Camps
- Part III Feminist Theorising and Protest Camps
- Part IV The Feminist Afterlives of Protest Camps
- Index
1 - Introduction: Feminism/Protest Camps
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Feminism/Protest Camps
- Part I Gendered Power and Identities in Protest Camps
- Part II Feminist Politics in and through Protest Camps
- Part III Feminist Theorising and Protest Camps
- Part IV The Feminist Afterlives of Protest Camps
- Index
Summary
Like freshly sharpened pencils, red rings painted on sleek white, the ready for business missiles line up efficiently in their silos while the women’s peace camp sprawls in contrast the other side of the fence. New circle of tents blooming colours onto the empty scrubland … but those who live permanently here, it is obvious, sleep under sheets of grubby plastic tarpaulin thrown over a pegged down tree. … [W]omen have learned to live with only the amount of stuff that can be held in your arms during an eviction. … Immediately it feels as though I have wandered into an enchanted forest.
Jane CampbellLove or its sister/
forces has stained Cumhuriyet Caddesi
with blood but les pavés pressed
hand to hand dry flowers become barricades,
underneath, roots of the red apple.
We aren’t static, aren’t mad.
Come see what our revolution has done to us!
Andrea BradyThis book asks feminist questions of protest camps. An increasingly important social movement tactic, protest camps are set up by activists as a temporary home in spaces that are politically useful, symbolically resonant or otherwise important to a community, in order to facilitate action for specific political ends and often to prefigure alternative ways of life. Camps can be spaces of personal experimentation, radical lifestyle innovation and muddy, colourful contrast with adjacent militarised or corporate structures, as indicated in Jane Campbell’s testimony of her time at Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp in the UK. They can also be spaces of intense if fractured collective identity formation and of violence from the state and other sources, as intimated in the haunting imagery of Andrea Brady’s poem, written in solidarity with activists protecting Gezi Park in Istanbul. While protest camps have been much documented and analysed, as we will show later, this book seeks to explore a dimension that been neglected in the academic literature. It asks: how do the politics of gender intersect with other social identities and power dynamics to shape protest camps? What happens when feminists are involved in protest camps or set up their own? How can contemporary feminism help us see afresh both the limitations and the potential of the protest camp form? What are the legacies of past involvement in camps for feminist theory and practice?
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Feminism and Protest CampsEntanglements, Critiques and Re-Imaginings, pp. 1 - 14Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2023