Graffiti makes for messy politics. In film and television, it is often used to create a sense of danger or lawlessness. In bathroom stalls, it is the disembodied expression of gossip, lewdness, or confession. But it is also a resistive tool of protest, making visible the disparate voices and interests that come together to make a movement.
In Conflict Graffiti, John Lennon dives into the many permutations of graffiti in conflict zones--ranging from the protest graffiti of the Black Lives Matter movement in Ferguson and the Tahrir Square demonstrations in Egypt, to the tourist-attraction murals on the Israeli Separation Wall and the street art that has rebranded Detroit and post-Katrina New Orleans. Graffiti has played a crucial role in the revolutionary movements of these locales, but as the conflict subsides a new graffiti and street art scene emerges--often one that ushers in postconflict consumerism, gentrification, militarization, and anesthetized forgetting.
Graffiti has an unstable afterlife, fated to be added to, transformed, overlaid, photographed, reinterpreted, or painted over. But as Lennon concludes, when protest movements change and adapt, graffiti is also uniquely suited to shapeshift with them.
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Situating his study at sites of conflict and interviewing artists, scholar John Lennon’s visually-rich CONFLICT GRAFFITI [@UChicagoPress] gives readers new perspectives for interpreting the graffiti and street art they encounter. @lindalevitt https://t.co/ROpu3o84ff https://t.co/2Ldo8sN11q
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Finally, Allison Schifani reads John Lennon’s Conflict Graffiti: From Revolution to Gentrification. https://t.co/WMIsAAetkP