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Resistance movement
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==Geographies of resistance== [[File:30855_Klingenberg_kino_Kampen_om_tungtvannet.jpg|thumb|right|280px|Members of the Norwegian resistance movement [[Milorg]], engaged in supply raids, espionage as well as the sabotage of [[Norwegian heavy water sabotage|German heavy water production]] during WW2]] When geographies of resistance are discussed, it is often taken for granted that resistance takes place where domination, power, or oppression occurs and so resistance is often understood as something that always opposes to power or domination. However, some scholars believe and argue that looking at resistance in relation to only power and domination does not provide a full understanding of the actual nature of resistance. Not all power, domination, or oppression leads to resistance, and not all cases of resistance are against or to oppose what is categorized as "power". In fact, they believe that resistance has its own characteristics and spatialities. In Steve Pile's (1997) "Opposition, Political Identities and Spaces of Resistance", geographies of resistance show: {{Blockquote|That people are positioned differently in unequal and multiple power relationships, that more or less powerful people are active in the constitution of unfolding relationships of authority, meaning and identity, that these activities are contingent, ambiguous and awkwardly situated, but that resistance seeks to occupy, deploy and create alternative spatialities from those defined through oppression and exploitation. From this perspective, assumptions about the domination/resistance couplet become questionable.|Steve Pile, 1996: 3||}} We can better understand resistance by accounting different perspectives and by breaking the presumptions that resistance is always against power. In fact, resistance should be understood not only in relations to domination and authority, but also through other experiences, such as "desire and anger, capacity and ability, happiness and fear, dreaming and forgetting",<ref>Steve Pile (1997), "Opposition, political identities and spaces of resistance", p. 3.</ref> meaning that resistance is not always about the dominated versus the dominator, the exploited versus the exploiter, or the oppressed versus the oppressor. There are various forms of resistance for various reasons, which then can be, again, classified as violent and nonviolent resistance (and "other" which is unclear). Different geographical spaces can also make different forms of resistance possible or impossible and more effective or less effective. Furthermore, in order to understand any resistance{{snd}} its capacity to achieve its objective effectively, its success or failure{{snd}} we need to take closely into account many variables, such as political identities, cultural identities, class, race, gender and so on. The reason is that these variations can define the nature and outcome of resistance. Harvey (1993),{{citation needed|date=December 2016}} who looked at resistance in relations to capitalist economic exploitation, took on a fire accident happened in the Imperial Foods chicken processing plant in Hamlet, North Carolina in 1991, in which 20 of 200 workers were killed and 56 were injured due to poor working conditions and protections. He compared this accident with a similar fire accident at Triangle Shirtwaist Company, New York, 1911, killing 146 workers, which caused a labor resistance by 100,000 people.<ref>Pile (1997), "Opposition, political identities and spaces of resistance", pp. 5β7.</ref> He argued that no resistance took place in response to the fire accident in Hamlet because most of the people who died there were black and women workers, and he believed that not only class but also other identities such as race, gender, and sexuality were important factors in understanding nature and outcome of resistance. For an effective resistance, he proposed that four tasks should be undertaken: {{Blockquote|First, social justice must be defined from the perspective of the oppressed; second, a hierarchy of the oppressions has to be definedβ¦..; third, political actions need to be understood and undertaken in terms of their situatedness and position in dynamic power relations: and finally, an epistemology capable of telling the difference between different differences has to be developed.|}} There are many forms of resistance in relations to different power dominations and actors. Some resistance takes place in order to oppose, change, or reform the exploitation of the capitalist economic systems and the capitals, while other resistance takes place against the state or authority in power. Moreover, some other resistance takes place in order to resist or question the social/culture norms or discourse or in order to challenge a global trend called "[[globalization]]". For example, [[LGBT movements|LGBT social movements]] is an example of resistance that challenges and tries to reform the existing cultural norms in many societies. Resistance can also be mapped in various scales ranging from local to national to regional and to global spaces. We can look at a big-scale resistance movement such as [[anti-globalization movement]] that tries to resist the global trend of capitalist economic system. Or we can look at the [[internal resistance to apartheid]], which took place at national level. Most, if not all, [[social movements]] can be considered as some forms of resistance. Not all resistance takes place in physical spaces or geographies but in "other spaces" as well. Some resistance happens in the form of [[Protest art|Protest Art]] or in the form of music. Music can be used and has been used as a tool or space to resist certain oppression or domination. Gray-Rosendale, L. (2001) put it this way:<ref>Gray-Rosendale, L. and Gruber, S. (2001), ''Alternative Rhetorics: challenges to the rhetorical tradition''. New York: State University of New York Press. pp. 154β56.</ref> {{Blockquote|Music acts as a rhetorical force that sanctions the construction of the boys' new black urban subjectivities that both challenge urban experience and yet give voice to it...music contributes a way to avoid physical and psychological immobility and to resist economic and cultural adaptation...and challenges the social injustice prevalent within the Northern economy.|Gray-Rosendale, 2001: 154β56}} In the age of advanced IT and mass consumption of [[social media]], resistance can also occur in the cyberspace. The Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of NSW's Tobacco Resistance and Control (A-TRAC) team created a Facebook page to help promote anti-smoking campaign and rise awareness for its members.<ref>Michelle Hughes, [http://blogs.crikey.com.au/croakey/2013/2/28/social-media-and-tobacco-resistance-control/ "Social media and tobacco resistance control"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140116105054/http://blogs.crikey.com.au/croakey/2013/2/28/social-media-and-tobacco-resistance-control/ |date=2014-01-16 }}. Retrieved 1 September 2013.</ref> Sometimes, resistance takes place in people's minds and ideology or in people's "inner spaces". For example, sometimes people have to struggle within or fight against their inner spaces, with their consciousness and, sometimes, with their fear before they can resist in the physical spaces. In other cases, people sometimes simply resist to certain ideology, belief, or culture norms within their minds. These kinds of resistance are less visible but very fundamental parts of all forms of resistance.
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