Abstract
This article analyses the specific forms of doing and building politics in the Chilean student movement, and through which, it becomes a key actor for mobilising (re)politicisation within a post-authoritarian democratic society. The bio-politics of existence – transforming life into political action – is central to understanding this role. The bio-politics of existence refers to the emergence of a new political subjectivity in the Chilean student movement engaging with new forms of (re) politicisation of everyday life and forms of egalitarian political relationships. The bio-politics of existence interweaves with self-transformation to constitute subjectivities that subvert neoliberal governmentalities. Learning through making mistakes is central for student activists in 2006 to (re)vision their political agency and animate, in 2011, a radical political imaginary of politics as being-in-common. The manifold forms of the bio-politics of existence in the Chilean student movement, from everyday activism to grassroots building network alliances – presupposing temporal contingencies to identity politics as marginal sites and spaces of resistance – unveil a rhizomatic growth of egalitarian, participatory politics through which the Chilean student movement transformed, from below, the character of politics and democracy in a society regarded as the first laboratory of neoliberalism.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Social Activism |
Subtitle of host publication | New Challenges in a (Dis)connected World |
Editors | Sandro Serpa, Diann Cameron Kelly |
Publisher | IntechOpen |
Pages | 1-19 |
Number of pages | 19 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781837698776 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 12 Sept 2023 |
Keywords
- the Chilean student movement
- the bio-politics of existence,
- neoliberal governmentalities
- prefiguration
- (re)politicisation