Publication | Closed Access
Social Movement Scenes: Place‐Based Politics and Everyday Resistance
38
Citations
42
References
2012
Year
Social ActivismSocial GeographySocial ChangeProtest StudiesPopular CultureSocial SciencesActivismMedia ActivismPolitical ScienceCivic EngagementCultural GeographySebastian HaunssSocial Movement ScenesSocial MovementsCulturePolitical GeographyCommunity OrganizingSociologyCritical GeographyPolitical MovementsArtsSocial AnthropologyUrban SpaceSpatial Politics
Abstract Sociologists Darcy Leach and Sebastian Haunss coined the term “social movement scene” to refer to people “who share a common identity and a common set of subcultural or countercultural beliefs, values, norms” and the network of physical places they frequent. Leach and Haunss explain the numerous ways in which scenes can benefit social movements (e.g. as pools of mobilization or as places for cultural experimentation) and that scenes are places where resistance happens. I propose that thinking of a scene as a process is more useful than thinking of it as a stable context where political activity happens. Scenes are the products of urban protests, such as squatting; rituals, such as protest and music; and the activities of everyday life. Drawing on research from sociologists, geographers, historians, and cultural studies scholars, I discuss social movement scenes on both the political left and right in terms of their spatial, symbolic, and relational dimensions.
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