Authors

CU Andersen
G Cox

Abstract

Writing in 1965, Mario Tronti’s claim was that the greatest power of the working class is refusal: the refusal of work, the refusal of capitalist development, and the refusal to bargain within a capitalist framework. One can see how this "strategy of refusal" has been utilised in all sorts of instances by social movements, but how does this play out now in the context of wider struggles over autonomy today – not just in terms of labour power and class struggles; but also intersectional feminism and queer politics; race and decolonialism, geopolitics, populism, environmental concerns; and the current pandemic? In what ways does a refusal of production manifest itself in contemporary artistic, political, social, cultural, or other movements? And, how might a refusal of certain forms of production come together with a politics of care and "social closeness" – also when thinking of how research itself might be refused?

DOI

10.7146/aprja.v10i1.128183

Publication Date

2021-08-13

Publication Title

A Peer-Reviewed Journal About

Volume

10

Issue

1

Publisher

Det Kgl. Bibliotek/Royal Danish Library

ISSN

2245-7755

Embargo Period

2024-11-19

First Page

4

Last Page

13

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