The performativity of the body: Turbulent spaces in Greece

E. Dimitris Kitis, Tommaso M. Milani

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This article explores the “performativity of the body” (Butler, 2011) using ‘anarchic’ and ‘anti-authoritarian’ protests in Greece as empirical starting points. We analyze the ways in which bodies speak politically by producing spatial turbulence in interaction with other bodies, and the materiality of urban environments. In doing so, we seek to contribute to the expansion of linguistic landscape scholarship into what Peck and Stroud (2015) call corporeal sociolinguistics. Our analysis of platform events (supermarket expropriations, smashing of CCTV-cameras, inscriptions of urban surfaces) and confrontational encounters (bloc formations, “dous”) illustrates spatial and affective tactics through which bodies in movement contest economic and political arrangements by appropriating, re-configuring and re-signifying sections of urban spaces.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)268-290
JournalLinguistic Landscape: An International Journal
Volume1
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015

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