If we burn The mass protest decade and the missing revolution

Vincent Bevins

Book - 2023

"According to a recent report published by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the number of mass protests has increased each year by over ten per cent. But we are not living in a world that is more just and democratic as a result. In If We Burn, acclaimed journalist and author of The Jakarta Method, Vincent Bevins sets out to answer a pivotal question: How did mass protest backfire in the 2010s? From the Arab Spring, to the Gezi Park protests in Turkey, to the "V for Vinegar" explosion in Brazil, to Ukraine's Euromaidan revolution, to the civil war in Syria, and the student uprisings in Hong Kong in 2019, Bevins aims to understand and present the factors that worked against these democratic protests acro...ss the world. In doing so, he shows the ways in which the conventional wisdom in 2010 was wrong but more importantly, what protestors at the time wish they had done differently. Through first person testimony coupled with a fresh analysis of the past, Bevins takes us back to the protests that defined a decade, adding needed clarity and understanding to how such fervent displays of political angst and calls for change were eventually lost. If We Burn is a unique and telling exploration of how a time of upheaval and change was met with vastly different outcomes than the idealism that produced it"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

303.484/Bevins
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 303.484/Bevins Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : PublicAffairs 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Vincent Bevins (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
352 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781541788978
  • Introduction
  • 1. Learning to Protest
  • 2. Mayara and Fernando
  • 3. Pior que tá não fica
  • 4. More Than an Uprising
  • 5. Around the World
  • 6. A Social Network
  • 7. Cowboys and Indians
  • 8. Minority Report
  • 9. The Free Fare Movement
  • 10. The Giant Awakens
  • 11. Five Causes, Four Fingers
  • 12. Eu Maidan
  • 13. The Free Brazil Movement
  • 14. Under My Umbrella
  • 15. No Gods, No Representation
  • 16. A Tale of Two Impeachments
  • 17. I Was in the 212
  • 18. O Mito
  • 19. A Tale of Two Explosions
  • 20. Reconstructing the Past
  • 21. Building the Future
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Why do mass protests and street demonstrations so often fail, leading to the opposite of what was originally sought in their wake? This question animates this excellent and important chronicle of social protest, primarily in the Global South, since 2010. Bevins, an award-winning and well-regarded journalist and correspondent who has previously reported from Indonesia and Brazil, confirms that journalism is "the first rough draft of history." In 2019, massive protests took place in 37 countries, many in reaction to the false promises of neoliberal globalization, the failed hope that democracy would spread in a post--Cold War world, and a reorientation toward how protests should be structured (e.g., horizontal, leaderless, tech savvy). Most protest movements failed to sufficiently grasp state power as the opponent and goal, as well as the need to do the hard work of sustained organization building. Well informed by academic research on mass movements, and interspersed with brisk narratives of protests and their suppression in Brazil, Hong Kong, Chile, Egypt, Tunisia, Ukraine, and elsewhere, this is a book for both high school and college libraries. It articulates in comparative and historical terms the hopes and limits of efforts to create social change. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers through graduate students; professionals. --Garth M. Massey, emeritus, University of Wyoming

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The 2010s saw left-wing protest movements around the world shake the establishment, but accomplish the opposite of what they wanted, according to this elegiac history. Journalist Bevins (The Jakarta Method) explores progressive uprisings in 10 countries, most of them following a fashionable "horizontal" model that eschewed hierarchy, leaders, programmatic demands, and political negotiations with governments. He gives the most attention to the 2013 protests in Brazil, which began as a demonstration against public transit fare hikes and swelled to encompass a broad swath of discontent; in ensuing years, Brazilian rightists adopted the same demonstration tactics, media strategies, and antiestablishment rhetoric to get the left-wing president, Dilma Rousseff, impeached and bring right-wing president Jair Balsonaro to power. Bevins surveys other political upheavals, including Egypt's 2011 Tahrir Square protests; fizzled prodemocracy protests in Hong Kong; and the 2019 protests in Chile, a rare success story, when politicians leveraged street demonstrations to bring a left-wing government to power. Bevins's colorful reportage captures the élan of militants--"If We Burn, You Burn With Us" warned a Hong Kong banner--and their giddy joy as demonstrations gathered steam, and he's also incisive in his critique of the protest movements' feckless disorganization, incoherent message, and cluelessness about what to do when the protest ends. The result is an illuminating postmortem on a decade of false dawns. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A former journalist in Brazil and Indonesia looks at the global protest movements from 2010 to 2020 and wonders how so many led to the opposite outcomes of what they were demanding. Bevins, who covered Brazil for the Los Angeles Times and Southeast Asia for the Washington Post, was intimately involved in the Brazilian street protests in 2013, among other events, and he spent four years interviewing people around the world to get a deeper understanding of this "mass protest decade," beginning in Tunisia in 2011. The author seeks to reveal why the demands were simply repudiated or worse--e.g., military crackdown in Egypt or the election of right-wing leader Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil in 2018. Much has been written about the role of social media in spurring a global democratic movement, and there was the tremendous role of Al Jazeera in reporting on the Arab Spring. However, in Libya, Syria, Bahrain, and elsewhere, things went very differently, as Bevins amply demonstrates. Despite initial encouragement in Hong Kong, the crackdown by China has been nearly complete. In Ukraine, the so-called Orange Revolution was successful in kicking the Soviet-backed leader out of Kyiv, yet Russia later invaded. Chile has been perhaps the lone success story. In 2021, Gabriel Boric, "the leader of the 2011 student protests who entered congressional politics in 2013 and signed the 'peace accord' in 2019, was elected president" at age 35, famously declaring, "If Chile was the cradle of neoliberalism, it will also be its grave." Particularly incisive is the author's questioning of protest leaders and other relevant figures about what they would have done differently, in hindsight. Bevins is correct about how little the media understand the Global South, and he shows how "the horizontally structured, digitally coordinated, leaderless mass protest is fundamentally illegible." Questions remain, but this insightful study should prove valuable to future activists across the globe. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.