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Occupying Wall Street Occupying Wall Street
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Converging on Wall Street Converging on Wall Street
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Six Globalizing the Revolution
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Published:June 2023
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Abstract
Chapter 6 of The Rise of the Masses details the emergence of Occupy Wall Street and the movement’s early development. The chapter explains how Occupy Wall Street emerged in response to the Arab Spring, showing how a loose band of anarchists sought to restage the conditions under which the 2011 revolutions took place, semi-successfully achieving an array of convergence conditions. This chapter covers the period between February and October 2011, explaining the movement’s initial organizational weakness and the synergy between the three conditions of convergence from which Occupy Wall Street benefited. The first of these was the occupation of Zuccotti Park’s character as an exceptional space: an open, participatory, and horizontal arena in which participation could take almost any form. The second was the occupation’s role as an opportune space: an arena in which protest and dissent was at once protected and attended to. Third was a paramount frame: a sense that the movement was summiting a national moment of collective resistance to the status quo.
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