Post Democracy
2015–2017
Post Democracy has recently arisen as a complex and contradictory term: for some it promises a new lens for the mobilizing forces of social media, considered catalysts for political imagination. Others equate Post Democracy with democracy’s demise due to the penetration of global capitalism into every regime type and the increasing intervention of international actors in domestic politics. Decried as “democratic melancholy,” such skepticism is considered ill placed by yet others. Common to most analysts of Post Democracy is the emphasis on impact (or content) as well as of form.
Over the course of four semesters, we will address these questions: How can new forms of social movements demobilize networks of power? What creative organizing tactics are being developed to reinvigorate a democratic ethos? Post Democracy will guide investigations into the nature of participation; the transformation of news media from educational tools to forms of entertainment; campaign financing and its potential reform; new forms of political institutions and alliances that are flexible and resilient.
Network
- ⁕ Jonathan Jones
- ⁕ Charles Heller and Lorenzo Pezzani
- ⁕ Burning Museum Art Collective
- ⁕ B’Tselem
- ⁕ Bisagra
- ⁕ Patrick Bernier and Olive Martin
- ⁕ Barış İçin Yürüyorum
- ⁕ Árpád Schilling
- ⁕ Ahmet Ogüt
- ⁕ IsumaTV
- ⁕ Coordinadora Universitaria de Disidencia Sexual (CUDS)
- ⁕ Forensic Architecture
- ⁕ Gulf Labor Artist Coalition
- ⁕ Gulnara Kasmalieva and Muratbek Djumaliev
- ⁕ House of Natural Fiber
- ⁕ Lihideb Mohsen
- ⁕ MADEYOULOOK
- ⁕ Marat Sarulu
- ⁕ Maria Thereza Alves
- ⁕ Omar Kholeif
- ⁕ PreparaNem
- ⁕ Simone Leigh
- ⁕ Superflex
- ⁕ Tintin Wulia
- ⁕ Zacharias Kunuk
- ⁕ Lawrence Abu Hamdan
- ⁕ Victoria Sobel and Casey Gollan