This article uses the case of a Bahraini activist to explore the twin interrelated ecologies of a hunger strike. The first ecology is the ethical framing of a prison hunger strike as a corporeal-environmental act of (self) destruction intended to achieve political ends. The second ecology is the operation of global media where international inaction inadvertently foregrounds the political struggles that larger events and discourses surrounding Egypt, Libya and Syria overshadow. What connects these two ecologies is the body of the hunger striker, turned into a spectacle and mediated via a politics of affect that invites a global public to empathize and so enter into his suffering. The connection between the two lies in the emaciated body of...
This article analyses the origins and the dynamics of the social movement against the energy corpora...
Hunger striking is a form of protest that escapes conventional forms of political participation. I a...
In this paper I will argue that the Egyptian uprising in 2011 succeeded due to Political decay: simp...
This monograph reveals in unprecedented detail how prison hunger strikes achieve monumental feats of...
This article examines two cases in which political groups sought to harness the new media ecology to...
Are prison hunger strikes a means of liberation or harbingers of death? Are they passive or active m...
Hunger-strikes present a challenge to state authority and abuse from powerless individuals with limi...
This article investigates the political agency of deportable people and the legacies of detention. I...
The ongoing crisis in Syria represents the most recent in a series of disruptive conflicts in the Mi...
The narrative of the Arab Spring (including the Syrian uprising) in the mainstream media appears cle...
Using feminist anthropology and interview data, this article investigates the gendered dimension of ...
This study considers the newspaper coverage of Irom Sharmila\u27s on-going, 13-year hunger strike in...
On December 17, 2010, a 26-year-old university graduate, Mohamed Bouazizi, set himself ablaze outsid...
Defence date: 13 May 2015Examining Board: Professor Donatella della Porta, (EUI Supervisor); Prof...
Using feminist anthropology and interview data, this article investigates the gendered dimension of ...
This article analyses the origins and the dynamics of the social movement against the energy corpora...
Hunger striking is a form of protest that escapes conventional forms of political participation. I a...
In this paper I will argue that the Egyptian uprising in 2011 succeeded due to Political decay: simp...
This monograph reveals in unprecedented detail how prison hunger strikes achieve monumental feats of...
This article examines two cases in which political groups sought to harness the new media ecology to...
Are prison hunger strikes a means of liberation or harbingers of death? Are they passive or active m...
Hunger-strikes present a challenge to state authority and abuse from powerless individuals with limi...
This article investigates the political agency of deportable people and the legacies of detention. I...
The ongoing crisis in Syria represents the most recent in a series of disruptive conflicts in the Mi...
The narrative of the Arab Spring (including the Syrian uprising) in the mainstream media appears cle...
Using feminist anthropology and interview data, this article investigates the gendered dimension of ...
This study considers the newspaper coverage of Irom Sharmila\u27s on-going, 13-year hunger strike in...
On December 17, 2010, a 26-year-old university graduate, Mohamed Bouazizi, set himself ablaze outsid...
Defence date: 13 May 2015Examining Board: Professor Donatella della Porta, (EUI Supervisor); Prof...
Using feminist anthropology and interview data, this article investigates the gendered dimension of ...
This article analyses the origins and the dynamics of the social movement against the energy corpora...
Hunger striking is a form of protest that escapes conventional forms of political participation. I a...
In this paper I will argue that the Egyptian uprising in 2011 succeeded due to Political decay: simp...