This essay revises post-15M movement political party landscape, emphasizing the intentional yet unusual use of the present within the New Left's organizing grammar. Against sectors of the traditional Left, who see presentism as a product of neoliberalism, I claim that in the post-15M conjuncture, the present constituted a battleground in the struggle for a dignified life. First, I focus on the Catalan left-wing nationalist party CUP's use of anarchist symbols to suggest that references to sabotage were deployed to disrupt parliamentary politics, forcing constant interruption. Second, I analyze Podemos founding member Iñigo Errejón's speech after the party's 2016 national election defeat, where his rhetoric linked the temporality of the present with anti-austerity protestors’ embodied presence. Last, I read the rise of neomunicipalisms as another iteration of presentism, aiming to politicize everyday life. To conclude, I advance that such material practices of “generative presentism” problematize presentism's assumed depoliticizing nature.
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August 1, 2021
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Research Article|
August 01 2021
The Generative Politics of Presentism in Post-15M Spain
Katryn Evinson
Katryn Evinson
Katryn Evinson is completing her PhD in Latin American and Iberian cultures and comparative literature at Columbia University. Her research charts histories of creative resistance in twentieth- and twenty-first-century Spanish visual culture.
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boundary 2 (2021) 48 (3): 169–190.
Citation
Katryn Evinson; The Generative Politics of Presentism in Post-15M Spain. boundary 2 1 August 2021; 48 (3): 169–190. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/01903659-9155789
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