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What is Representation?

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    Representation is a broad concept that 
    relates to many different spheres of daily life:  
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    language, media, economics, politics, culture 
    and social identity itself. Understanding the  
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    different ways that representation functions is 
    crucial to understanding the operation of power.  
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    When wielded by states and capitalists, 
    representation can be a powerful tool of  
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    manipulation, disenfranchisement, and oppression. 
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    Representation is most commonly understood 
    as a visual, written, or audio depiction  
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    of something, or someone. It can refer broadly 
    to what images mean, and how they come to take  
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    on those meanings. It can also refer to the 
    process of how an individual comes to serve  
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    as a stand-in for a given community, political 
    party, or ideology. The concept of representation  
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    is important for anarchism because of the 
    fundamental role it plays in producing and  
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    reproducing social and political hierarchies. 
    Anti-authoritarian perspectives analyze and  
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    understand how representation sets the 
    terms for what is considered truth,  
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    what is deemed normal,
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    what we should think of 
    others,
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    and what we should think about ourselves.
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    The use of representation as a form 
    of power and a means of control  
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    has been around for centuries.
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    Powerful  nations have always maintained their status  
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    not just through the deployment of military 
    force,   
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    but through the spread of ideology. 
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    And one of the most successful ways of spreading 
    ideology has been through the idea of  representation.
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    The history of colonialism is not 
    just a series of military conquests.  
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    It is also a history of religious 
    decrees, fictional literature,  
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    academic writings,
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    scientific reporting
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    museum exhibitions
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    Western european countries painted the picture of "the 
    other" to describe individuals, communities,  
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    and entire nations who didn't belong to the 
    dominant group, and were therefore different in  
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    some fundamental way.
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     In other words, people 
    became marked as distinct from "the norm"  
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    or made out to be more prized or vile, 
    based on how they were represented.  
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    The longterm subjugation of colonized 
    people through this racist system of  
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    representation lies at the very foundation of 
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    settler-colonial cultures and political systems.
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     Colonial depictions of certain ethnic and 
    racial groupings are bound tightly to other forms  
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    of oppression,
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    such as white supremacy 
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    and patriarchal concepts of gender.  
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    The ruling classes maintain their control 
    by creating images and tropes of common enemies.  
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    Whether this enemy is represented as the figure 
    of the terrorist, immigrant, homosexual, or  
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    anarchist, it can be used to help corral patriotic 
    sentiments and develop a sense of us vs. them,  
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    binding a segment of the people to their rulers 
    through the shared bonds of identity. 
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    This use of representation was foundational 
    to the formation of nation-states.   
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    And to this day,
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    dehumanizing representations of 
    internal and external enemies permeate popular culture.
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    It shapes societies' collective psyche, 
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    and forges new forms of reactionary allegiance.
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    Representation is the life blood of politics.  
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    It is at play every time political actors advocate 
    policy   
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    or act on others' behalf in the political arena
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    In liberal democracies, elected 
    representatives are understood to reflect the  
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    will of the majority. These politicians claim to 
    represent their constituents' interests, thereby  
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    ensuring that they have a voice 
    in public policy-making. 
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    This is a lie that fools fewer people every year. 
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    Whether a state is ruled by liberal democratic  institutions, 
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    military dictatorships, 
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    one-party rule,
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    or hereditary dynasties,  
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    representation is key to the maintenance 
    of legitimacy and power. 
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    Behind the  scenes,
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     bartering,
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    optics
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    competition,
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    manipulation
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    nepotism
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    and an array of underlying social dynamics  
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    always factor into how authority is upheld and maintained.
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    But to the public,
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    sacred state institutions 
    and charismatic leaders are represented  
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    as a stand in for abstract concepts 
    like majority rule and a nation's freedom. 
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    Representative democracy promotes the 
    idea that our only way of wielding power  
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    is by choosing who will represent us. 
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    This  discourages us from learning how to wield power for ourselves.
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    Democracy is not alone in this, 
    even if it may be more effective in its illusions.  
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    All governing institutions constrain 
    individuals into passivity and subjugation,  
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    then rely on the language of representation 
    to maintain hierarchies and divisions that  
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    disempower people from 
    taking collective action.  
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    The idea that common people are active participants 
    in a well-meaning political system is a   
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    comforting lie,
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    which serves to hide 
    the fact that we are, more or less,  
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    merely spectators of a rat race 
    between the people in charge. 
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    We must understand and confront how various 
    institutions use representation  
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    to keep us divided, weak
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    and tied to the dominant 
    system. 
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    Politicians, corporations, media outlets
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    organized religions, and non-profits continue 
    to spread dangerous ideologies that result  
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    in widespread marginalization, subjugation, 
    prejudice, micro-aggressions,
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    and even death.  
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    The detrimental effects of mainstream 
    representation around race,  
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    gender, ethnicity, religion, sexuality, and 
    more cannot be ignored.
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    At the same time,  
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    we must not fall prey to the myth 
    that being represented in more  
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    positive ways equates to social, 
    political and economic liberation.
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    The ways in which people are seen, and they 
    ways they see themselves are   
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    essentialcomponents of revolutionary struggle. 
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    But under liberal democratic capitalist regimes,  
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    notions of equality are often conflated 
    with, and swallowed up, by representation.  
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    By co-opting ideas around how historical radical 
    grassroots movements
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    have addressed their own oppression,
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    major corporations, non-profit 
    organizations and academic institutions have  
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    attempted to prioritize reformist, non-violent 
    steps towards more progressive representation.  
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    This common political tactic coincided neatly 
    with the rise of neoliberal globalization,  
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    and its increased focus on individualism. 
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    Neoliberalism has restructured the global market 
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    into a worldwide labor pool. 
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    It's been accompanied by an ideology 
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    that places heavy emphasis on privatization and 
    individual responsibility.
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    Under this system,  
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    states and capital have used representation to 
    weave together the illusion of a global community;  
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    they point to increased diversity within the 
    ruling classes to support the idea that  
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    "free and open" markets
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    are evidence of how "democratic" 
    and "tolerant" the neoliberal order is.  
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    Neoliberalism has transformed political 
    representation from a framework to address  
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    racism, sexism, and all other forms of 
    injustice that thrive within capitalism 
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    into a demand to diversify the political and 
    economic elite
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    without addressing the massive  
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    wealth and income inequalities that form 
    the material foundation of oppression.  
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    As a result, a new kind of 
    multicultural universalism has prospered,  
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    one that lionizes difference, even as 
    it ignores real-world, systemic issues. 
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    Today,
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    capitalisms ability to profit 
    from the representation of marginalized  
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    communities is more evident than ever.
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    The internet encourages the creation and constant  
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    shaping of multiple accounts and identities, 
    suggesting that our social media profiles can  
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    portray different sides of ourselves 
    to the outside world, in all sorts of  
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    unique, endlessly customizable ways.
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     So-called 'late capitalism' skews our perception  
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    of representation's power.
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    Instead of being granted equality,
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    we are being sold a product:  
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    a representation of "equality" from 
    the very systems that make us unequal. 
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    Representation not only shapes what our culture 
    looks like.  
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    It impacts our sense of reality. 
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    And it is the people who are creating mass systems 
    of representation who end up defining what reality is. 
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    This keeps us all locked in a 
    never-ending spectacle, without honestly  
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    confronting our systemic disenfranchisement and 
    alienation;
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    it is a constantly shifting trap  
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    for maintaining a status quo that will never 
    address the root of structural inequality. 
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    We must reject increased representation as the 
    ceiling and litmus test for social change.  
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    Instead, we should focus on building new ways 
    to celebrate our diversity  
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    and promote our own means of artistic and cultural production.
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     This means that any representation we do take part in
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    should prioritize authenticity, community empowerment,
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    and an explicit  drive to build a new, more liberatory 
    world, 
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    all while challenging the current world order. 
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    Anarchism rejects the idea that anyone can 
    genuinely represent another person's real needs.  
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    It rejects the idea that those in power 
    should coordinate people's desires and interests.
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     At the base of anarchist philosophy 
    lies a deep desire for an interdependent,  
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    ungovernable world. 
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    No representation or  representatives inside a mass system will  
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    ever help us build that world.  
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    We must do it for ourselves. 
Title:
What is Representation?
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
11:18

English subtitles

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