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Occupy

The spatial dynamics of discourse in global protest movements

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ISBN 9789027242716 | EUR 90.00 | USD 135.00
 
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Large-scale protest movements have recently transformed urban common spaces into sites of resistance. The Arab Spring, the European Summer, the American Fall in 2011, the revolts in India and South Africa and, more recently, in Istanbul, in several cities in Brazil, and in Hong Kong, are part of a common wave of protests which reclaims squares and urban places, monumentally designed as political and economic centres, as places for discussion and decision-making, for increasing participation and intervention in the governance of the community. Through banners and signs, open assemblies, and other communicative practices in the encampments and interconnecting physical and virtual spaces, participants permanently reconfigure their lived spaces discursively. The attempt to account for on-going social phenomena from the moment they first happen, and with an international perspective, undoubtedly represents a theoretical and methodological challenge. This book is a successful and innovative attempt to address this challenge, capturing the complex interplay between social, spatial, and communicative practices, drawing on complementary and alternative methods. Originally published in Journal of Language and Politics issue 13:4 (2014).
[Benjamins Current Topics, 83] 2016.  viii, 180 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 9 May 2016
Table of Contents
“In this day and age when injustices are all around us, the ‘occupy movements’ echo the voices of ‘the people’. This outbreaking and detailed book conveys the different, and often similar agendas through which multimodal devices (texts, voices, objects, images and moving people) are manifested. Together, the studies in the book assign new meanings to ‘languages in action’ in urban public spaces. An excellent, fascinating book, which challenges the field.”
“Bringing together language, politics, place, placards and protest, this book opens up an alternative space to consider how recent political movements have been giving new meaning to city squares, resistant bodies and oppositional discourses.”
“This book offers innovative perspectives on the dynamic interplay between space and semiotic practices. From Tahrir Square to Los Angeles City Hall Park, from Greece and Spain to Chile, the contributors take the reader on a world tour of the ways in which language, visual images and bodies operate performatively in order to create moments of spatial rupture. A truly interdisciplinary collection.”
“This book will be of interest to scholars conducting spatial analyses, with some chapters [...] of particular interest to linguistic landscape scholars.”
Cited by (8)

Cited by eight other publications

Abdelhay, Ashraf, Cristine Severo & Sinfree Makoni
2025. 11 Protesting and de-utopianizing sociolinguistics. In Embodied Histories, Imagined Worlds, Emplaced Resistance,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Lai, Kate Mei Lam, Selim Ben-Said & Teresa Wai See Ong
2025. 1096 Fleeting notes or writing on the wall?. In Embodied Histories, Imagined Worlds, Emplaced Resistance,  pp. 109 ff. DOI logo
Miranda Correa, Melisa
2023. Contextual graffiti and collective action frames at the Chilean social outbreak in 2019. Linguistic Landscape. An international journal 9:4  pp. 387 ff. DOI logo
Volvach, Natalia
2023. Manoeuvres of dissent in landscapes of annexation. Linguistic Landscape. An international journal 9:2  pp. 113 ff. DOI logo
Taylor-Leech, Kerry
2020. Timorese talking back. Linguistic Landscape. An international journal 6:1  pp. 29 ff. DOI logo
Kitis, E. Dimitris & Dmitri Jegels
2018. Genres of protest in post-apartheid South Africa: Revisiting audience contributions to political speeches. African Studies 77:4  pp. 549 ff. DOI logo
Agustín, Óscar García
2017. The Aesthetics of Social Movements in Spain. In Street Art of Resistance,  pp. 325 ff. DOI logo
Flesher Fominaya, Cristina
2017. European anti-austerity and pro-democracy protests in the wake of the global financial crisis. Social Movement Studies 16:1  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 13 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Subjects and metadata

Communication Studies

Communication Studies

Main BIC Subject

Main BISAC Subject

ONIX Metadata

ONIX 2.1
ONIX 3.0

LoC, MARC XML

U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  2016007748 | Marc record
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