Contents: Introduction: subjectivity and collective action, Antimo Luigi Farro and Henri Lustiger-Thaler. Part I Subjectivity, Memory, and Collective Action: A new era for collective movements: the subjectivization of collective action, Antimo Luigi Farro; Occupying human values: memory and the future of collective action, Henri Lustiger-Thaler; The emergence of the migrant subject, Yvon Le Bot; Grassroots mobilizations for sustainable consumption, Paola Rebughini; Social movement in Japan: split mentalities and memory, Daishiro Nomiya; Emotions, memory, and new cultural movements in Turkey, Deniz Günce Demirhisar; Memory and sociology: subjectivization a de-subjectivization, Michel Wieviorka. Part II Contentious Cultures: Violence and the Egyptian Revolution, Farhad Khosrokhavar; Citizens' movement in South Korea and reflexive modernization, Han Sang-Jin; Social movement activism in South Africa: ebbs and flows, 2000-2010, Marcelle C. Dawson and Virginia Setsmedi; Beyond institutionalization: urban movements in Rome, Massimo Allulli and Ernesto d'Albergo; Brazilian social movements in the Latin American context, Maria da Glória Gohn; Market, legitimacy, and the politics of risk: the candlelight protest in South Korea, Chang Dukjin and Shin Jin-Wook; Civil society, democratization, and globalization in Latin America, Ilán Bizberg; Religion and land takeovers in Mexico: collective miracle discourses and the building of community, Marie Christine Doran; Taking everything back: CasaPound, a far Right movement in Italy, Daniele di Nunzio and Emanuele Toscano; Group formation, riots, and immigrants: social movements in Britain, Danièle Joly. Afterword: Globalization and the war of gods, Alain Touraine; Index.
Reimagining Social Movements : From Collectives to Individuals