dear nettimers,

I just posted this short text on the newTactical Media Files blog, a first 
attempt to reflect on the remarkable street protests (the 'movement of the 
squares') from Tahrir to Puerta del Sol, from Tunis to Athens and beyond. It 
seems slowly possible to start taking this discussion a bit further than the 
necessary mobilisation statements witnessed so far.

http://blog.tacticalmediafiles.net/?p=106

bests,

Eric

-----------------

The Tactics of Camping

by Eric Kluitenberg, June 20, 2011.


Yes We Camp!

Michel de Certeau observed that the tactics employed by the 'weak' are always 
on the watch for opportunities, and that these opportunities must be seized "on 
the wing".  Tactics, de Certeau writes, have no base at their disposal from 
where they can capitalise on their advantages, prepare their expansions, or 
secure their independence from circumstances. Instead tactics 'insinuate' 
themselves into the places of others. They operate on the terrain of strategic 
power, 'fragmentarily', without taking it over in its entirety. Whatever these 
tactics win, they cannot keep. [1] 

Hence, tactics are always nomadic.

The Spanish elections of 2011 certainly presented one such opportunity to 
appropriate the moment and a strategic space tactically. The spill-over of 
resentment over youth unemployment, political inaction and incompetence, and 
the continuing spectre of austerity sparked a spontaneous anti-movement;  the 
Indignado, the outraged. The Indignado started massive street protests taking 
the city squares in cities all over Spain by camping on them, repurposing the 
strategic space for civic deliberation and protest.

Perhaps most remarkable about this 'anti-movement' is precisely its refusal to 
be or become a movement. In their manifesto for Real Democracy they write: "We 
are ordinary people. We are like you: people, who get up every morning to 
study, work or find a job, people who have family and friends. People, who work 
hard every day to provide a better future for those around us." [2] And in the 
call for nothing less than  #Globalrevolution the initiators identify 
themselves as "the the outraged, the anonymous, the voiceless", who no longer 
gaze at vertical power, but instead look sideways, horizontally:  "No political 
party, association or trade union represents us. Nor do we want them to, 
because each and every one of us speaks for her or himself." [3]

When scrutinising the websites and resources that are connected to the central 
anchoring point, http://takethesquare.net/, no final set of principles or 
demands can be found, except for a call to involvement in working towards a 
'better world' that puts 'people and nature' before 'economic interests', and 
>useful documents< that can guide the process of bottom-up, collective decision 
making, avoiding the need for leadership or 'organisation'. "The time has come 
for the woman and man in the street to take back their public spaces to debate 
and build a new future together." [4]

http://takethesquare.wordpress.com/useful-documents/

Camping Blues

An important question is where to locate your camp? The city square is for 
obvious reasons a well chosen site. As Greek activist Christos Gionanopoulos 
maintains, "democracy is born in the square", the classical site for a people's 
assembly. In his view the 'movement of the squares' has initiated a startlingly 
new political culture, one that  its open, participatory, and offers a 
'directly democratic way of organising and functioning'.  "Within a single week 
it has given birth to a political culture of a different type, one that 
literally overcomes all known models of organising and struggle to date", 
Gionanopoulos maintains. [5]

There is a deeper sense of media awareness in this (anti-) 'movement of the 
squares'. Gionanopoulos writes: "..the stance of the movement toward Mass Media 
is also differentiated, with the refusal to engage with them, not even by way 
of issuing press releases. With the screening of what part of its procedures 
and organising is photographed or taped, and most importantly, with the 
creation of the movement's own channels of communication — with its main 
website www.real-democracy.gr, being the only medium-voice of its decisions." 
But obviously, the well-chosen site, the public city square derives much of its 
power from its public visibility. It is certainly impossible, and also highly 
undesirable for this public spectacle not to be picked up by mass and 
mainstream media. In fact the public camps on city squares are one of the most 
mediagenic forms of popular protest to have emerged in recent years, from 
Tahrir to Puerta del Sol, and this status has undeniably facilitated their 
international dispersal by the very system the activists claim to deny. 

www.occupiedlondon.org/blog/2011/06/09/613-democracy-is-born-in-the-squares/

Some activists can also get disheartened with the lagging nature of collective 
and non-hierarchical decision making procedures. In a text of 2002, The Dark 
Side of Camping, Susanne Lang and Florian Schneider reflect on the daily 
experience of the International border camp in Strasbourg, July 19 - 28,  2002. 
[6] They recall how by the time that the 'radical-democratic decision-making 
process' had come to the point of stating positions, the sun had already 
reached Zenith, without actual decisions having been made. The urgency of the 
matter on the table, the inhuman border, detention and expulsion regimes 
appears to get lost in the haze of bottom-up democracy for activists in a hurry 
to address them head on. Exasperation and frustration can easily set in. Thus, 
de-centred decision making always needs to navigate a precarious balance.

Refusal of the media question was prevalent in those days, more so than in the 
current  'movement of the squares'. Lang and Schneider lament the ignorance 
towards the media activist component in the border camp, derided internally as 
'silicon valley'. But they also point out how the complete refusal to 
co-operate with any media outlet, not even the indymedia type, leads to a fatal 
distortion of public perception of the actions: "Clearly, the manner in which 
the whole event is perceived from the outside will necessarily shift if the 
simple attempt to mediate ones own positions will be dismissed as 
opportunistic. : calls for freedom of movement might easily be interpreted as 
calls for freedom to muck about and act the fool. Who is protesting on the 
streets and why, which actions have been chosen and for what reason? The 
history, background, aims and ideas of the camp were concealed. Therefore the 
press relied on the statements of the police and the mayor", Lang and Schneider 
write. And while scepticism about playing the mainstream media game might be 
justified, relying on at least self-organised media outlets and communication 
channels to the wider public seems an essential step forward for the activists. 

Lang and Schneider had to recover from a severe case of camping blues in those 
days. For them the marriage of camping and media activism was about about 
political communication: "networking understood as situational negotiations 
that are based on the possibility of changing ones own standpoint as well as 
the standpoint of the other". However, what they encountered was an introverted 
political culture, what they call a 'a neo-romantic motivated anti-capitalism'. 
Lang / Schneider: "Prevalent in those ten days in Strasbourg was a hermetic 
culture of immediacy that was neglecting and dismissive of every form of 
artificial or technical supported mediation, due to the fear of it being a 
hindrance on some amorphous idea of natural self-development." [6]

www.tacticalmediafiles.net/article.jsp?objectnumber=44087

>From the media to the street

One of he central claims of the tactical media 'movement' has been to state 
that power has shifted to the symbolic domain of electronic mediation, and 
therefore power also has to be contested in the sphere of symbolic mediation, 
as for instance Steve Kurtz of Critical Art Ensemble has claimed [7].  This 
shift also implies that to intervene in and  tamper with the symbolic (in 
real-time mediation) means to intervene in and tamper with 'real' power. So, 
why then this seemingly regressive move back to the street and the square? 

One important lesson can already be drawn from the Syrian uprising, an 
escalating conflict bordering on civil war whose outcome is still completely 
uncertain while this text is written. Dubbed the 'Syrian Cyber Revolution' the 
tactical appropriation of social media tools played a prominent role in 
organising the street protests, as they have done in many other places. The 
Syrian youngsters / activists derived a strong sense of empowerment from their 
newly found capacities to organise, coalesce and unify around common interest 
via social networking tools such as facebook.

However, a painful lesson was to learn that the newly established networks 
could also be 'read' - necessarily so because of the relatively open and public 
character they required to be useful for intended purposes - by the Syrian 
authorities, whose prime interests was to seek out the central nodes in the 
network and eradicate them, working outwards towards the mass of networked 
participants. Visibility here means not just empowerment, but also 
vulnerability, becoming a discrete, identified, and localised target.

A strange paradox emerged: In the seemingly private space of the social network 
activists had now become identified as an individual and more importantly  as a 
discrete target for authoritarian repression. On the street however, the 
individual protester dissolved into a crowd to become a public. The rising 
death-tole from the Syrian protests indicates that this act of dissolving in 
the public is by no means without risk. It does, however,  escape the targeted 
designation of the social networking space, which as an activist tool had de 
facto become ineffectual or even counter-productive for the local activists. 
Only in exile, out of reach of a repressive and violent authority, could the 
social networking space be used  for effective public political communication, 
and possibly to mobilise the international diaspora.

The tactical operations, both in the streets as well as in the media, 
necessarily needed to remain nomadic in these circumstances, always on the look 
out for temporary spaces of opportunity.  

Hybrid tactics in a hybrid space

Embodied public spaces and media spaces do not exist independent of each other 
anymore. They constitute each other. As much as that the spaces of opportunity 
in the media are determined by the physical and political conditions they are 
built upon, so is the physical public space constructed by the media flows that 
permeate it; communicative practices, surveillance, mediated representation. As 
a result the logic of these spaces is hybridised: the media flows have to 
locate themselves to become manifest and meaningful, to escape their inherent 
virtualisation, while physical presences are permeated by electronically 
mediated flows that both construct and capture them.

Activists need to understand the hybridised logic of hybrid space [8], its 
variability, its moments of opportunity and closure, to make use of them. The 
newest generation of civic activists, the (anti-) 'movement of the squares' 
seems to have ingrained and internalised this hybrid logic, almost 
unthinkingly. Social media tools, wireless devices, digital networks, 
self-publication channels seem nothing less than self-evident to them, and they 
are learning how such spaces of opportunity can suddenly close down, at which 
point it is time to move on - thus producing a continuous nomadic movement that 
as yet is unclear where it will land.

www.tacticalmediafiles.net/article.jsp?objectnumber=48405

References:

1 - Michel de Certeau - The Practice of Everyday Life, University of California 
Press, 1984, p. xiv.

2 - www.democraciarealya.es/?page_id=814

3 - See the archived announcement for June 19, 2011,  at: 
www.tacticalmediafiles.net/article.jsp?objectnumber=53248

4 - ibid.

5 - Christos Gionanopoulos, "Democracy is born in the squares", June 6, 2011
     
www.occupiedlondon.org/blog/2011/06/09/613-democracy-is-born-in-the-squares/

6 - Susanne Lang and Florian Schneider, The Dark Side of Camping, 2002. 
     www.tacticalmediafiles.net/article.jsp?objectnumber=44087

7 - See amongst others Critical Art Ensemble, "Digital Resistance"
     www.critical-art.net/books/digital/

8 - See also: Eric Kluitenberg, The Network of Waves, 2006
     www.tacticalmediafiles.net/article.jsp?objectnumber=48405


Source:

Tactical Media Files Blog
http://blog.tacticalmediafiles.net/?p=106


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