Occupy Wall Street: Carnival Against Capital? Carnivalesque as Protest Sensibility

Occupy Wall Street: Carnival Against Capital? Carnivalesque as Protest Sensibility While some commentators and journalists have dismissed Occupy Wall Street as carnival, lawmakers and police officers did not miss the point. They reached back to a mid-nineteenth century ban on masking to arrest occupiers wearing as little as a folded bandana on the forehead, leaving little doubt about their fear of Carnival as a potent form of political protest. New York Times journalist Ginia Bellafante initially expressed skepticism about 'air[ing] societal grievance as carnival,' but just a few days later she warned against 'criminalizing costume,' thus changing her condescension to caution as she confirmed the police’s point: masking can be dangerous, Carnival is serious business.

Stages

21.07.2012 | by Claire Tancons

Carnival, Processions and Parades - Interview Claire Tancons

Carnival, Processions and Parades - Interview Claire Tancons ...I am skeptical of claims made on behalf of populations, particularly in culturally disenfranchised and economically impoverished locations such as New Orleans or Haiti. I also do think that there can be legitimate concerns about the neo-colonial nature of the worldwide biennial trend, which tends to impose a Western cultural model as mainstream in non-Western locales the artistic practices and cultural heritage of which often belie the notion that contemporary art is a globally shared cultural value.

Face to face

22.07.2010 | by Claire Tancons