Is the Constitution the Trap? Decryption and Revolution in Chile
We will examine the revolts, begun in October of 2019, and currently developing in Chile under three conjoined parts. First, we will not try to theoretically ‘tame’ the revolutionary creature, but rather to plug immanently into the energy of the ‘potentia’ of the revolutionary event. To this extent,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Law and critique 2020-04, Vol.31 (1), p.41-49 |
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description | We will examine the revolts, begun in October of 2019, and currently developing in Chile under three conjoined parts. First, we will not try to theoretically ‘tame’ the revolutionary creature, but rather to plug immanently into the energy of the ‘potentia’ of the revolutionary event. To this extent, we will highlight the shortcomings of a theoretical enterprise that intends to explain it in traditional terms or that thrives for a variant of simple ‘reformism’. Second, and consequently, we will describe how the concept of the constitution (and its practice) is the perfect product of coloniality. Hence, the concept of the ‘constitutional trap’ is not something unique to the Chilean experiment, but that the constitutional idea itself is the main pipeline of coloniality and the most sophisticated product in the contention of democracy. Third, and to encompass and give a particular direction to the previous topics, we will deploy the ‘theory of encryption of power’ and the concept of the ‘hidden people’ (or the people as a synecdoche) to explicate the Chilean phenomenon under a new light, where no past is irrevocable, and no future is necessary. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s10978-020-09261-z |
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Hence, the concept of the ‘constitutional trap’ is not something unique to the Chilean experiment, but that the constitutional idea itself is the main pipeline of coloniality and the most sophisticated product in the contention of democracy. 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subjects | Capitalism Colonialism Constitutional law Constitutions Cryptography Cultural Studies Data encryption Democracy Education Free markets Gender Studies Geopolitics Government agencies Hegemony Human Rights Legal History Philosophy Philosophy of Law Power Rebellions Society Theories of Law |
title | Is the Constitution the Trap? Decryption and Revolution in Chile |
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