Change Agent: Gene Sharp's Neoliberal Nonviolence, Part Two
Gene Sharp, the Cold War defense intellectual-cum-"Nonviolent Warrior," is famed for developing a theory of nonviolent action that has undergirded regime change operations around the world. But Sharp also had an impact closer to home: the U.S. protest left. Thanks to a little-known organiz...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nonsite (Atlanta, Ga.) Ga.), 2020-01 (30) |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
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Zusammenfassung: | Gene Sharp, the Cold War defense intellectual-cum-"Nonviolent Warrior," is famed for developing a theory of nonviolent action that has undergirded regime change operations around the world. But Sharp also had an impact closer to home: the U.S. protest left. Thanks to a little-known organization from the 1970s called the Movement for a New Society, Sharp's ideas are ubiquitous on the protest left, bound-up with a rarely named ideology, "revolutionary nonviolence." Nonviolent direct action is a vital feature of broad-based people's movements, but historically, "revolutionary nonviolence" has been, at best, ambivalent about, and at worst, antagonistic to questions of class struggle. A closer look is warranted. |
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ISSN: | 2164-1668 |