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Nocturnal Games in the Streets

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From the beginning, the student uprising – but not the factory strikes - gave itself an air of insurrection that translated into skirmishes in which the two sides, the police and the protestors, attempted with more or less elegance to avoid the irreparable. The nocturnal games in the streets had more in common with dance than with combat. (Genet 2004, pp. 173–174).

Abstract

Starting from a re-assessment of the relevance of the situationist analysis of riots in the 1960s to the riots in 2011, and finding their analysis largely irrelevant, this paper argues for an interpretative framework derived from Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. Using Hegel’s concepts of the Good, the Bad, the state and wealth, the categories of noble and ignoble or base consciousness emerge as attitudes towards social phenomena with a strong explanatory relevance to the recent riots. Drawing upon Kojeve and Hyppolite’s readings of the Phenomenology, the argument is that the riotous looting of 2011 lacked all the elements of combat, challenge and struggle for recognition which would make of them a sovereign gesture and a historical episode. Instead, they embodied an abjection before the culture of the commodity which makes of them not a demand for mastery but a continuation of slavery. Given this, the view of the sub-proletarian proposed by Pasolini in the 1970s offers a descriptive analysis which perhaps also explains the current vogue for the language of the feral underclass, whilst demonstrating that such an analysis is not the sole property of Conservative Justice ministers, and can be distinguished from the latter by the connection it makes between antisocial amorality at the top of society and its repetition at the bottom.

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Acknowledgments

This paper is a developed version of the first part of a presentation made at the Critical Legal Conference, Aberystwyth, 9-11 September 2011, ‘Being Before the Law’. Many thanks to the conference organisers, particularly Andreja Zevnik and Erszebet Strausz, who also convened the stream in which the paper was presented, ‘The Power of Life’s Excess: Contesting sovereignty from sites that do not exist’, and to the participants in that session. Thanks also to guest editors for this edition, Daniel Matthews and Dimitrios Tzanakopoulos, for their interest.

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Correspondence to Angus McDonald.

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McDonald, A. Nocturnal Games in the Streets. Law Critique 23, 185–197 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10978-012-9105-x

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