In:Occupy: The spatial dynamics of discourse in global protest movements
Edited by Luisa Martín Rojo
[Benjamins Current Topics 83] 2016
► pp. 157–178
Spatial practices and narratives
The GenkiDama for education by Chilean students
Published online: 11 May 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.83.07gar
https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.83.07gar
The Chilean students’ rebellion emerged in 2011 within the wave of global protests. Even though it is an organized movement, with roots in a specific historical context, it shares with the global movement the use of new media technologies, the appropriation of public spaces, and the concern for democracy and equality. The movement deploys flexible forms of organization and mobilization such as flash mobs, in the case analyzed in this article, the GenkiDama for Education. The students create a narrative based on the famous Manga series Dragon Ball Z to reframe the conflict between students and government. As Manga fans, they open up participation to other less politically defined identities. The flash mob moment works as a communicative event in which the narrative is put into place and strengthens a sense of community in the streets of Santiago de Chile. To analyze the connections between the fictional narrative of Manga and the use of the public space, we draw on Michel de Certeau’s theory on spatial practices and the function of stories and place/space. Spatial practices during the flash mob challenge the social and spatial order in order to represent a symbolic victory of the students over the political system.
Keywords: Flash mob, Manga, mobilization, narrative, place, space, spatial practices, students' movement
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Cited by (3)
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Porto, Melina & Silvana Julieta Barboni
Hatibovic, Fuad, Juan Sandoval, Ximena Faúndez, Jose-Manuel Gaete, Magdalena Bobowik & Paola Ilabaca
Seals, Corinne A.
2017. Analyzing the linguistic landscape of mass-scale events. Linguistic Landscape. An international journal 3:3 ► pp. 267 ff.
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