216 Pages
    by Routledge

    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    fresh appreciation of the events of 1989 as we approach their 20th anniversary in 2009 Performative Democracy explores a potential in political life that easily escapes theorists: the indigenously inspired enacting of democracy by citizens. Written by one who experienced an emerging public sphere within Communist Poland, the book seeks to identify the conditions for performativity-performing politics--in public life. It examines a broad spectrum of cultural, social, and political initiatives that facilitated the non-violent transformation of an autocratic environment into a democratic one. Examples of performativity range from experimental student theater, through the engaged political thinking of dissident Adam Michnik, the alternative culture, and the Solidarity movement, to the drama of the Round Table Talks (and their striking parallels in South Africa), and finally, the post-1989 efforts of feminist groups and women artists to defend the recently won right of free public discourse. The book argues that performative democracy, with its improvisational mode and imaginative solutions, deserves a legitimate place in our broader reflections on democracy. Matynia describes how two apparent miracles of recent history-that communism in Poland was brought down without violence and that apartheid in South Africa was ended without a bloodbath-were the results of hard work and a new approach to change that she calls "performative democracy." Matynia reveals amazing parallels between the drama of Poland's Round Table Talks in 1989 and the Truth Commissions in South Africa in 1994. Matynia describes how experimental student theater groups, though subsidized by a totalitarian regime afraid of any authentic public life, created little pockets of public space for free and meaningful expression that were augmented by uncensored underground publishing and further expanded by the Solidarity movement into a democratic society within the totalitarian state. Matynia describes in a personal way how in the 1970s student theater groups planted the seeds of an authentic public sphere, how underground publishers nurtured freedom of expression and social criticism, and how, after democratic elections, women artists in the 1990s fought to sustain the newly won right to free public discourse. Matynia traces in vivid human terms the democratic aspirations and practices that led to democratic change in Poland but went largely unnoticed by western media and policymakers.

    Chapter 1: Invitation to Performative Democracy Chapter 2: Staging Freedom Chapter 3: The Public Matter Chapter 4: Citizen Michnik Chapter 5: Furnishing Democracy: The Story of Two Round Tables Chapter 6: Provincializing Global Feminism Chapter 7: En-Gendering Democracy: Women Artists and Deliberative Art in a Transitional Society Chapter 8: Postscriptum on an Old Bridge

    Biography

    Elzbieta Matynia

    "A first-rate and firsthand account of the slow but inexorable transformation of Poland."
    —Christopher Hitchens, Slate

    “This beautifully-realized original book explores the borderlands governing the zone between that which is permitted and that which is not to illuminate how democracy and dignity can develop out of harsh and humiliating authoritarian conditions. Focusing on transitions to political regimes and transformations to gender, Performative Democracy is an instance of what it analyzes—for it is that rare intervention that itself can help generate the change it most admires.”