'Today the future seems impossible. Revolt, Donatella Di Cesare argues, "interrupts time, blows up the agenda of power, halts the routine of dispossession, and sends history off course." In this defence of revolt in fragments, the anarchic conditions of politics are remembered and achingly defended. An essential addition to the inventory of political concepts.'J. M. Bernstein, The New School for Social Research
The Right to BreatheThe Constellation of RevoltsBetween Politics and PoliceOccupations: From the Factories to the SquaresBella ciao: Notes of ResistanceA Spectral EraIn Search of the Lost RevolutionWhat Does Revolt Mean?The Individual's Cry - And the Wounds of HistorySpartacus's Day After TomorrowThe Limits of Public SpaceThe Right to AppearA Volte-Face on PowerPrefigurationsAn Existential TensionIf Dissent is a CrimeThe New DisobedientsAnonymous's GrinOn Invisibility: A Show of Self-ConcealmentMasks and Zones of IrresponsibilityLeaksResident Foreigners: The Anarchist RevoltBarricades in TimeBibliographyNotes
Donatella Di Cesare is Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Sapienza University of Rome.