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Situationism and Performative Communication: The Counter-Conduct of Committed Indifference
Author(s) -
Veronique Emond
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
stream
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1916-5897
DOI - 10.21810/strm.v9i2.238
Subject(s) - dissent , situationism , performative utterance , hegemony , sociology , order (exchange) , epistemology , aesthetics , political science , law , philosophy , finance , politics , economics
Foucault’s notion of counter-conduct offers an interesting and challenging way to reimagine dissent. This essay briefly examines how certain kinds of dissent are uniquely challenging to systems and institutions because they are not easily subsumed by the system or its perceived (or traditional) contraries. An important example of this kind of dissent was, in the twentieth century, the Dada, Surrealist, and Situationist movements, which don’t simply point (or conduct) people to a standard and easily imagined alternative to the prevailing hegemony, but seek to radically disrupt the way people see the world through different kinds of conduct which are fundamentally contrary to the prevailing order.

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