Waves,Floods, Currents: The Politics and Poetics of Water in Social Movement Analysis |
| |
Authors: | Jamie Matthews |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Sociology, Goldsmiths, University of London, London, UK |
| |
Abstract: | The task of conceptualising social movements draws on a wealth of watery images, from protest waves and political currents, to imagining mobilisations as tides, ripples, cascades or high-pressure hydraulics. Called upon to analyse complex processes, these waters have a life of their own, carrying analytical implications while extending a relationship to water that is never only symbolic and is material, embodied and historical. This article explores the ways water is “enrolled” to understand movements, to advance three arguments: first, these use familiar water morphologies to naturalise particular, located understandings of political change and social form; second, they imply normative claims and ideological affinities regarding political struggle; third, this has implications for our relationship to water, echoing the abstract and alienating “modern water” of capitalist world-ecology. The article considers how critical water knowledges and subjectivities, often sustained by social movement spaces, indicate possibilities of a being-otherwise with water and its meanings. |
| |
Keywords: | water hydrosocial social movements social theory metaphor |
|
|