Choreographies of Protest Performance as Recruitment to Activism

This article seeks to understand why some bystanders to protest transcended to become actors in protests during the re‑emergence of wide-spread student activism in an institution of higher education in South Africa during 2015. For this purpose, a performance ethnography is employed in the observati...

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Main Author: Phiwokazi Qoza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Student Affairs in Africa 2020-07-01
Series:Journal of Student Affairs in Africa
Online Access:https://www.journals.ac.za/index.php/jsaa/article/view/4182
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spelling doaj-cd9cb700e82f484ea12a43965a9854132020-11-25T03:07:29ZengJournal of Student Affairs in AfricaJournal of Student Affairs in Africa2311-17712307-62672020-07-018110.24085/jsaa.v8i1.41822752Choreographies of Protest Performance as Recruitment to ActivismPhiwokazi Qoza0Research Grants Management at the Allan Cormack House, the University of Cape Town. She holds an MA in Political and International Studies from Rhodes UniversityThis article seeks to understand why some bystanders to protest transcended to become actors in protests during the re‑emergence of wide-spread student activism in an institution of higher education in South Africa during 2015. For this purpose, a performance ethnography is employed in the observation and analysis of protest performances. The article shows that in encountering an atmosphere of protest, there emerged a relation of feeling, referred to as “feeling the vibe or atmosphere”, which those who became protest performers resolved in ways which increased their capacity to act in favour of co‑constituting that atmosphere. In the encounter between the body of bystanders and the atmosphere of protest, non‑linear somatic communication, characterised by active and passive gestures and postures, occurred through which protest performers developed contact and connection with other bodies as a result of the displacement of space. Therefore, this article suggests that participation in activism can be about going with the flow of movement in an uncertain and ambiguous moment and is not limited to an identification with the pre‑existing organisation of preferences and interests as the creativity of movement produces a social space – a performed becoming in space.https://www.journals.ac.za/index.php/jsaa/article/view/4182
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Phiwokazi Qoza
spellingShingle Phiwokazi Qoza
Choreographies of Protest Performance as Recruitment to Activism
Journal of Student Affairs in Africa
author_facet Phiwokazi Qoza
author_sort Phiwokazi Qoza
title Choreographies of Protest Performance as Recruitment to Activism
title_short Choreographies of Protest Performance as Recruitment to Activism
title_full Choreographies of Protest Performance as Recruitment to Activism
title_fullStr Choreographies of Protest Performance as Recruitment to Activism
title_full_unstemmed Choreographies of Protest Performance as Recruitment to Activism
title_sort choreographies of protest performance as recruitment to activism
publisher Journal of Student Affairs in Africa
series Journal of Student Affairs in Africa
issn 2311-1771
2307-6267
publishDate 2020-07-01
description This article seeks to understand why some bystanders to protest transcended to become actors in protests during the re‑emergence of wide-spread student activism in an institution of higher education in South Africa during 2015. For this purpose, a performance ethnography is employed in the observation and analysis of protest performances. The article shows that in encountering an atmosphere of protest, there emerged a relation of feeling, referred to as “feeling the vibe or atmosphere”, which those who became protest performers resolved in ways which increased their capacity to act in favour of co‑constituting that atmosphere. In the encounter between the body of bystanders and the atmosphere of protest, non‑linear somatic communication, characterised by active and passive gestures and postures, occurred through which protest performers developed contact and connection with other bodies as a result of the displacement of space. Therefore, this article suggests that participation in activism can be about going with the flow of movement in an uncertain and ambiguous moment and is not limited to an identification with the pre‑existing organisation of preferences and interests as the creativity of movement produces a social space – a performed becoming in space.
url https://www.journals.ac.za/index.php/jsaa/article/view/4182
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