Category Archives: Guerrilla Movements

Variable Weather 1: From SDS/Weatherman to the Days of Rage

 One place to start in describing Weather as an ecology is theory, even if it was a movement that generally seen as privileging action over theory.1 In Weatherman, the initial Weather faction position paper “You Don’t Need a Weatherman to … Continue reading

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Baader Meinhof 2: Guerrilla Subjectivation

The aspect of guerrilla subjectivation in the RAF has been taken up recently by Simon O’Sullivan in Art Encounters Deleuze and Guattari (2006), otherwise dealing with Deleuze and Guattari and aesthetics, as an exemplary case study of the militant production … Continue reading

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Baader Meinhof Part 1

The Red Army Faction, more widely known by the police and mass media generated name of the Baader Meinhof Group, or even gang, can also be understood as produced at the intersection of the post 1968 student movement and repressive … Continue reading

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Debray and Marighella: Revolution in the Revolution

    The work that gave a more theoretical expression of both the Cuban revolution and guerrilla warfare more generally, and one that was highly influential, especially on Europeans, was Régis Debray’s Revolution in the Revolution. Debray, a Parisian intellectual and … Continue reading

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Guerrrilla Ecologies: Taber, Mao, Che

The lines of modern Guerrilla warfare go back at least to the Nineteenth Century in multiple struggles against colonial empires; the term itself was first used to describe the tactics of Spanish peasants resisting Napoleon’s invasion of the Iberian peninsula … Continue reading

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