On 13 June, Anne Lene Stein will defend her PhD thesis titled Agonism against the odds: Epistemic disruptions and bodies of dissent in Palestine and Israel at the Department of Political Science, Lund University.
The thesis explores how protests and performances in Palestine and Israel are used to challenge dominant versions of history and identity - especially those that silence or exclude marginalised voices. Focusing on events like joint Palestinian-Israeli memorial ceremonies, Jewish Israeli anti-occupation/anti-apartheid protests, and Palestinian artistic performances, it asks how these actions can disrupt entrenched divisions and create space for new ways of understanding and engaging with conflict.
The study is based on fieldwork across multiple sites in Israel and Palestine, including interviews and observations with both Palestinian and Jewish Israeli activists and artists. It develops the notion of agonistic epistemic disruptions - moments when performances of dissent not only challenge dominant knowledge, but also open up space for alternative future imaginations, even within a deeply divided and asymmetrical context.
By looking at how individuals resist through their bodies, voices, and creative expression, the thesis shows how protest can be more than opposition - it can be a way of imagining different political futures. Overall, this work sheds light on the power of performance and protest in divided societies and asks what kinds of resistance are possible when people refuse to be silenced.
The thesis is available to read and dowload here.
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