Five years later and we are still digesting 2011 and the revolts that made that year so special. One result of the movements was that they brought into the universities a new generation of students angry, experienced in struggle and hungry to reflect on what had happened, on both the achievements and the weaknesses of the Occupy movement. Anna Szolucha's book is an outstanding outcome of this process of reflection, at once rigorous and infused with the restless search for a better world. Very much to be recommended.
John Holloway, author of "Crack Capitalism" and "Change the World Without Taking Power"
Anna Szolucha's book is a major contribution to the literature on direct democracy and social movements. It comes at the right moment, as the political issues raised by the Occupy movement - inequality, police repression, and the failure of representative democracy - continue to reverberate in unexpected ways. A gripping work of participatory action research, historiography and critical theory, Szolucha's book is essential for activists and scholars interested in direct action, prefigurative politics, and the occupation of public space under conditions of militarized neoliberalism.
Eddie Yuen, co-editor of "Confronting Capitalism: Dispatches From A Global Movement"
Real Democracy in the Occupy Movement is a scintillating contribution to social movement theory which returns it to an engagement with the big intellectual and political questions. Grounded in the author's militant ethnography and participatory action research, it exemplifies an approach to engaged research on movements which is simultaneously radical and doable. The book goes
beyond simple celebration of the movement to show that real democracy is not just another model to be fetishised, but a living practice with no fixed endpoint and no guarantees beyond the creative efforts of participants. This book is a substantial contribution to social movement theory and social movements alike. It is also a great read.
Laurence Cox, co-author of "We Make Our Own History...," editor of social movements journal Interface
Five years later and we are still digesting 2011 and the revolts that made that year so special. One result of the movements was that they brought into the universities a new generation of students angry, experienced in struggle and hungry to reflect on what had happened, on both the achievements and the weaknesses of the Occupy movement. Anna Szolucha's book is an outstanding outcome of this process of reflection, at once rigorous and infused with the restless search for a better world. Very much to be recommended.
John Holloway, author of "Crack Capitalism" and "Change the World Without Taking Power"
Anna Szolucha's book is a major contribution to the literature on direct democracy and social movements. It comes at the right moment, as the political issues raised by the Occupy movement - inequality, police repression, and the failure of representative democracy - continue to reverberate in unexpected ways. A gripping work of participatory action research, historiography and critical theory, Szolucha's book is essential for activists and scholars interested in direct action, prefigurative politics, and the occupation of public space under conditions of militarized neoliberalism.
Eddie Yuen, co-editor of "Confronting Capitalism: Dispatches From A Global Movement"
Real Democracy in the Occupy Movement is a scintillating contribution to social movement theory which returns it to an engagement with the big intellectual and political questions. Grounded in the author's militant ethnography and participatory action research, it exemplifies an approach to engaged research on movements which is simultaneously radical and doable. The book goes
beyond simple celebration of the movement to show that real democracy is not just another model to be fetishised, but a living practice with no fixed endpoint and no guarantees beyond the creative efforts of participants. This book is a substantial contribution to social movement theory and social movements alike. It is also a great read.
Laurence Cox, co-author of "We Make Our Own History...," editor of social movements journal Interface