6533b7dafe1ef96bd126d9ad

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Political Action Beyond Resistance: Arendt and "Revolutionary Spirit" in Egypt

Ari-elmeri Hyvönen

subject

arabikevätHannah Arendt; Michel Foucault; Judith Butler; action; resistance; freedomGeneral Chemical Engineeringmedia_common.quotation_subjectTemporalityButler Judithhannah arendtpoliittinen osallistuminenFortunaresistanceJudithPoliticsPresentationPolitical scienceta517Political philosophypoliittinen toimintavallankumouksetta611media_commonmichel foucaultjudith butlerFoucaultMichelvastarintaTragedyArendtArendt Hannahlcsh:JC11-607lcsh:Women. Feminismlcsh:Political theoryEgyptipolitical activityAction (philosophy)AestheticsFoucault MichelHannahEgyptactionfreedomHumanitiesResistance (creativity)vapauspolitical participationlcsh:HQ1101-2030.7Butler

description

The article examines what it calls the "politics-as-resistance" frame in contemporary political theory, originating in the works of Michel Foucault and Judith Butler. This way of organizing political experience is contrasted with Hannah Arendt's political thought, particularly her writings on revolutionary action. Arendt's often overlooked – and partly unpublished – passages on virtù and fortuna are further suggested as important additions to her thinking on action. I argue that Arendt's "world-centric" approach can illuminate certain aspects of political experience that remain dimmed in the more subject-oriented politics-as-resistance frame. Particular focus is paid to the austere notion of freedom in politics-as-resistance, its overly process-oriented presentation of political temporality, underdeveloped approach to institutions, and insuficient exploration of the joyful end of the affective register of action. In the last part of the article, the tragedy of the Egyptian 2011 revolution is discussed as an illustration of the arguments. peerReviewed

10.7227/r.19.2.5https://doi.org/10.7227/R.19.2.5