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political graffiti

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Journal Article
Social Text (2022) 40 (2 (151)): 49–68.
Published: 01 June 2022
...Mitja Velikonja Abstract This article deals with mostly negative ideological images of refugees, as they erupted in political graffiti and street art (stickers, stencils, various inscriptions) in Slovenia during the so-called refugee crisis from the fall of 2015 on. Its basic questions are three...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Social Text (2018) 36 (1 (134)): 55–60.
Published: 01 March 2018
... about the value or meaning of art to social life in general, the art form under consideration were graffiti? This doesn’t happen much these days (although in a different political moment it once did) because these debates are so often implicitly framed around bourgeois conceptions of art...
Journal Article
Social Text (2014) 32 (1 (118)): 1–21.
Published: 01 March 2014
... and political literature dealing with the wall is in Arabic, where Arabic occurs in the wall’s surface, its function is largely decorative.13 What is the audience for the graffiti, and how does that constitu- ency impact its form and content? Figure 1 displays arms raised and hands clenched in search...
Journal Article
Social Text (2012) 30 (4 (113)): 25–53.
Published: 01 December 2012
... of storytell- ing and political commentary. Sporting a hoodie and a baseball cap, El Général fills the recording booth (a dimly lit basement room whose walls are decorated with graffiti and a prophetic number: 14) with earnest yet apprehensive intensity. Collaborative Revolutionism The Tunisian...
Journal Article
Social Text (2018) 36 (1 (134)): 145–153.
Published: 01 March 2018
... is reached when it becomes perfectly indifferent, as the queer-feminist-theory-reading Trump-voter article seems to us, to which side of the political divide you fall upon. That is to say, you are the butt of the joke, whether or not you, like us, have slogged through those eight hundred pages, or even...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Social Text (2003) 21 (2 (75)): 141–162.
Published: 01 June 2003
... are authorized by prevailing notions of culture. Exploring debates around contests both for Jerusalem and for its homes puts into relief two different valuations of Jerusalem. Most journalistic, political, and academic discourse takes for granted that the primary significance of Jerusalem is as a holy city...
Journal Article
Social Text (2011) 29 (4 (109)): 81–105.
Published: 01 December 2011
... (news playing on a radio, political graffiti, announcements on public loudspeakers). Like the camera’s distance from the characters, the gap these juxtapositions register aims to disaggregate individual life from its...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (4 (101)): 97–107.
Published: 01 December 2009
...Rania Astrinaki This essay is a personally and politically implicated account of the December 2008 youth uprising in Greece, by an academic who, along with a group of her colleagues, participated actively in “street action” and followed closely the discourses articulated around it, struggling...
Journal Article
Social Text (2006) 24 (1 (86)): 103–125.
Published: 01 March 2006
... is a political. Of course she can read,” the doctor answered. The two men still talked for a while, and, as they were leaving, Mrs. Sosro told me, the police agent slipped a book under her pillow.9 There can be few things more dangerous than a good-hearted (and colonial) police agent. Mrs. Sosro’s...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 123–127.
Published: 01 September 2009
... directly with the politics of the feminist movement, and credits Ellen Willis and Alice Echols, especially, with establishing in the 1980s a Social Text brand of feminism based on constructionism and materialism. The essay traces the engagement of feminist theory with postmodernism in the journal's pages...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 129–133.
Published: 01 September 2009
...Anna McCarthy Social Text 's engagement with mass culture, and particularly film, began as a way of rethinking the binaries structuring Marxist cultural criticism. The terms shifted over the years, partly in response to political developments such as the culture wars of the 1990s and partly...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 136–140.
Published: 01 September 2009
... the governmentality of leftist academic knowledge production, it suggests that Euro-American journals like Social Text be attentive to their ongoing role in the production and effects of tensions between general theoretical ambition and the particularities of politics located in place. © 2009 Duke University Press...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 134–135.
Published: 01 September 2009
..., with itself (what is it to be purely feminist In ST 9/10 (1984) Ellen Willis details the intense debate within feminism in the late 1960s and 1970s about whether the movement belonged within larger socialist/left political work or should be separate. This was a debate about whether capitalism...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 141–146.
Published: 01 September 2009
... within larger socialist/left political work or should be separate. This was a debate about whether capitalism is the source of women’s oppression or, as Willis and other radical feminists thought, “male supremacy was itself a systematic form of domination.” It was also a debate about how...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 147–151.
Published: 01 September 2009
... (1984) Ellen Willis details the intense debate within feminism in the late 1960s and 1970s about whether the movement belonged within larger socialist/left political work or should be separate. This was a debate about whether capitalism is the source of women’s oppression or, as Willis and other...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 152–153.
Published: 01 September 2009
... belonged within larger socialist/left political work or should be separate. This was a debate about whether capitalism is the source of women’s oppression or, as Willis and other radical feminists thought, “male supremacy was itself a systematic form of domination.” It was also a debate about how...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 155–157.
Published: 01 September 2009
... the intense debate within feminism in the late 1960s and 1970s about whether the movement belonged within larger socialist/left political work or should be separate. This was a debate about whether capitalism is the source of women’s oppression or, as Willis and other radical feminists thought, “male...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 159–163.
Published: 01 September 2009
... Willis details the intense debate within feminism in the late 1960s and 1970s about whether the movement belonged within larger socialist/left political work or should be separate. This was a debate about whether capitalism is the source of women’s oppression or, as Willis and other radical...
Journal Article
Social Text (2009) 27 (3 (100)): 164–168.
Published: 01 September 2009
... of feminism with broader progressive movements and, so to speak, with itself (what is it to be purely feminist In ST 9/10 (1984) Ellen Willis details the intense debate within feminism in the late 1960s and 1970s about whether the movement belonged within larger socialist/left political work or should...
Journal Article
Social Text (2013) 31 (1 (114)): 109–125.
Published: 01 March 2013
... life — in New York, especially — since the 1960s. In this critical interview, Benderson discusses urgent political issues relevant to his practice as an author, including gentrification in New York and the decline in the critical currency of counterculture; his processes and practices as a writer...