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Moving Politics:

Emotion and ACT UP's Fight against AIDS
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5 Reviews
University of Chicago Press, Dec 15, 2009 - Social Science - 536 pages

In the late 1980s, after a decade spent engaged in more routine interest-group politics, thousands of lesbians and gay men responded to the AIDS crisis by defiantly and dramatically taking to the streets. But by the early 1990s, the organization they founded, ACT UP, was no more—even as the AIDS epidemic raged on. Weaving together interviews with activists, extensive research, and reflections on the author’s time as a member of the organization, Moving Politics is the first book to chronicle the rise and fall of ACT UP, highlighting a key factor in its trajectory: emotion.

 

Surprisingly overlooked by many scholars of social movements, emotion, Gould argues, plays a fundamental role in political activism. From anger to hope, pride to shame, and solidarity to despair, feelings played a significant part in ACT UP’s provocative style of protest, which included raucous demonstrations, die-ins, and other kinds of street theater. Detailing the movement’s public triumphs and private setbacks, Moving Politics is the definitive account of ACT UP’s origin, development, and decline as well as a searching look at the role of emotion in contentious politics.

  

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Review: Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UP's Fight against AIDS

User Review  - Scott Neigh - Goodreads

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Review: Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UP's Fight against AIDS

User Review  - Dont - Goodreads

Deb Gould's Moving Politics has sat on my shelf waiting to be read since it first came out. I was thrilled to find a study that put the emerging analysis around political affect into practice in ... Read full review

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Contents

Why Emotion?
1
I The Affects and Emotions of Mobilization
49
II Activism as WorldMaking
177
III The Feelings of Decline
267
Lesbian and Gay Newspapers
445
Glossary with Notes on Terms
449
References
453
Index
495
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About the author (2009)

Deborah B. Gould is assistant professor of sociology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

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