The End of Representative Politics, Revisited

Simon Tormey, Jean-Paul Gagnon

Research output: Contribution to journalSpecial issue

Abstract

In reinterrogating core concepts from his 2015 book, The End of Representative Politics, Simon Tormey explains the nature of emergent, evanescent, and contrarian forms of political practice. He sheds light on what is driving the political disruption transpiring now through a series of engaging comments from the field on well-known initiatives like Occupy, #15M, and Zapatistas and also lesser-known experiments such as the creation of new political parties like Castelló en Moviment, among others. Postrepresentative representation, it is argued, is not an oxymoron; it, like the term antipolitical politics, is rather a provocative concept designed to capture the radically new swarming politics underway in countries like Spain, Italy, Greece, Portugal, and Iceland. Citizens are tooling up with ICTs, and this has led to resonant political movements like #15M in Spain or Occupy more broadly. Key takeaways from this interview include the double-edged nature of representation and the fact that new forms of political representation are breaking the mould.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)82-101
Number of pages20
JournalDemocratic Theory
Volume4
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2017
Externally publishedYes

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