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A multimodal reading of public protests

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dc.contributor.author Day, Sarah
dc.contributor.author Seedat, Mohamed
dc.contributor.author Cornell, Josephine
dc.contributor.author Suffla, Shahnaaz
dc.date.accessioned 2022-03-17T14:46:39Z
dc.date.available 2022-03-17T14:46:39Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10500/28637
dc.description.abstract Public protests in (un)democratic polities, reflective of discursive articulations of resistance and material expressions of struggle, seek to disrupt prevailing unjust societal, political and cultural practices. The insurrectionist purposes of protests are often in contravention of public order regimens, which seek to regulate enactments of public protests, minimise the disruptions inher ent to protests and legitimise those defined as non-violent. This produces a non-violent–violent protest binary, which fails to account for the dynamic nature of protests. This study, critical of the non-violent–violent binary, assumed a multimodal analysis of unedited video footage of a selected authorised protest in the City of Cape Town, South Africa to understand the rapid discursive and kinaesthetic shifts that may occur within single protest events. The findings suggest that protests shift between moments of resistance and insurgency and moments of appeasement of official scripts. As such, protest enactments within a particular discursive space seem to be constitutive of resistance to power, insurgence and cooperation as well as actions defined either as legitimate or illegitimate by official discourse. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Protest, non-violent–violent binary, South Africa, multimodal discourse analysis en
dc.title A multimodal reading of public protests en
dc.type Article en
dc.description.department Institute for Social and Health Studies (ISHS) en


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