This article rethinks the concept of presence in feminist theory through the empirical study of Tunisian feminist and queer movements after the 2010-11 revolution. Over the past decade, these movements have displayed various forms of mobilisation, revealing different shades of presence/absence. Some strategies focused on gaining visibility within institutions and physical public spaces, while others showed new forms of disembodied, digitally mediated presence/absence. With the recent rise of cyber-authoritarianism, a re-calibration of positions of presence/absence have enriched our understanding of presence. Building on interviews and social media content analysis from 2017 to 2023, the article challenges the widespread notion that physical presence equates to empowerment and absence to disempowerment. It argues that presence and absence are political positions within a spectrum of contention, influenced by political opportunities, and calls for the recognition of multiple, disembodied and hybrid forms of presence/absence.
della Valle, C., Simoncini, G. (2024). Shades of presence in post-2011 Tunisia: evolving political positions in feminist and queer activism. CONTEMPORARY POLITICS, Online first, 1-22 [10.1080/13569775.2024.2395394].
Shades of presence in post-2011 Tunisia: evolving political positions in feminist and queer activism
della Valle, Clara
Primo
;
2024
Abstract
This article rethinks the concept of presence in feminist theory through the empirical study of Tunisian feminist and queer movements after the 2010-11 revolution. Over the past decade, these movements have displayed various forms of mobilisation, revealing different shades of presence/absence. Some strategies focused on gaining visibility within institutions and physical public spaces, while others showed new forms of disembodied, digitally mediated presence/absence. With the recent rise of cyber-authoritarianism, a re-calibration of positions of presence/absence have enriched our understanding of presence. Building on interviews and social media content analysis from 2017 to 2023, the article challenges the widespread notion that physical presence equates to empowerment and absence to disempowerment. It argues that presence and absence are political positions within a spectrum of contention, influenced by political opportunities, and calls for the recognition of multiple, disembodied and hybrid forms of presence/absence.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.