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OverviewIn the aftermath of the global mass protests of the 2010s, democratic theorists have shown renewed interest in conceptualizing popular mobilization and ""the people."" A series of provocative works have theorized assembled crowds in the streets as sources of democratic authority, legitimacy, and sovereignty. These insightful accounts nevertheless often remain detached from the full range of the situated experiences of protesters. Inappropriable Force brings the concrete, on-the-ground practices of Turkey’s 2013 Gezi Uprising into the foreground of theoretical reflection,asking what people gathered in the streets shared, desired, or refused, and what their public experimentations with politics, language, and aesthetics made possible. Working from the empirical particularities of Gezi to political theory, the book theorizes protest as a political meaning-making enterprise that reconfigures everyday regimes of sense, speech, and engagement. Drawing on Gezi’s archives and engaging democratic and critical theorists such as Judith Butler, Giorgio Agamben, Walter Benjamin, Jacques Rancière, Joan Copjec, and René Girard, the book identifies a surplus in protest irreducible to the categories of popular sovereignty, authorization, or legitimation. This surplus – an inappropriable force – can only be experienced in practice, through collective action. Not predicated on unified will or hegemonic claims to peoplehood, it unfolds in plural modes of thinking, sociality, affect, creativity, and imagination that emerge when people assemble out of doors. Adopting a practice-oriented and deparochializing approach, Inappropriable Force treats the political activities and cultural artifacts of the Gezi protests as texts of political theory in their own right. In doing so, it conceptualizes popular protest as a generative reservoir of political meaning and critical insight. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Nazlı KonyaPublisher: Fordham University Press Imprint: Fordham University Press ISBN: 9781531514075ISBN 10: 1531514073 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 05 May 2026 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsPreface vii Introduction: A Refusal to React to Power on Power’s Own Terms 1 1 ""What Unites Rather Than Separates Us"": The Gezi Spirit and the Seductions of Sovereignty 26 2 Inappropriable Surplus: The Democracy Watches and Gezi-Envy 59 3 Breaking Billboards: Protest and the Politics of Refusal 88 4 Down with Grand Narratives!: Humor, Sense, and Nonsense at the Gezi Protests 116 Conclusion: Protest’s Promise for Democratic Theory and Politics 147 Acknowledgments 157 Notes 159 Bibliography 203 Index 227Reviews""Konya distinctively theorizes inappropriability in protesters’ lived material practices of play and humor. The book offers something genuinely new to the study not only of protest but of democratic theory more generally."" - Lida Maxwell, Boston University ""Inappropriable Force offers a compelling, beautifully written, and theoretically rich account of popular action, exposing how analytical frameworks predicated on popular sovereignty produce impoverished readings of protest. Focusing on Gezi and theorizing from the ground up, Konya deftly shows how novel resistance practices often refuse the very language and premises of the state."" - Çiğdem Çıdam, Union College ""Inappropriable Force offers a compelling, beautifully written, and theoretically rich account of popular action, exposing how analytical frameworks predicated on popular sovereignty produce impoverished readings of protest. Focusing on Gezi and theorizing from the ground up, Konya deftly shows how novel resistance practices often refuse the very language and premises of the state.""---Çiğdem Çıdam, Union College ""Konya distinctively theorizes inappropriability in protesters' lived material practices of play and humor. The book offers something genuinely new to the study not only of protest but of democratic theory more generally.""---Lida Maxwell, Boston University Author InformationNazlı Konya is Assistant Professor of Government at Colby College. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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