My article Evading Biopolitical Control: Capoeira as Total Resistance was recently published by Global Society. Here is an abstract and a link to the full article
The analysis of ‘total war’ as
systemic, ubiquitous and unrelenting has increased the analytical and political
urgency of understanding resistance. Drawing on Foucault’s elaboration of
biopolitics and ‘making strange,’ this article theorises ‘total resistance’
through a study of the Afro-Brazilian art of capoeira. It explores how capoeira
adepts in the early 20th century resisted the 'total war' of state
repression of capoeira and the heritage that it embodied.
This article argues that, by
engaging with, and protecting themselves against, the state, capoeira
practitioners demonstrated resilience through adaptation and diversification.
The corporeality of capoeira provided a holistic response to the biopolitical
power of the state, and capoeira players 'made strange' (in Foucauldian terms)
the normalcy of power, rescuing themselves and their way of life. In answer to
the ‘total war’ which makes patterns of violence apparently inevitable, the
‘total resistance’ of capoeira evaded obliteration, and maintained the
possibility of other outcomes.
The full article is available here: http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/cXx84cRBZxERWhvAbjmQ/full
Mestra Gege e Saputi playing at the Praca da Dinha, Salvador in 2014
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