TY - JOUR
T1 - Dramaturgies of change
T2 - Staging political transformation
AU - Stacey, Timothy
AU - Oomen, Jeroen
AU - Hoffman, Jesse
AU - Hajer, Maarten Allard
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/5/6
Y1 - 2025/5/6
N2 - Against the backdrop of escalating climate change and widespread political dissatisfaction, calls are increasing for radical transformation of socioeconomic and political structures. But how such transformations could materialise remains an open question. In this article, we argue for alternative ways of understanding political stasis and change. Drawing on the established tradition of interpreting politics as theatre, we argue that dramaturgical analysis helps to spot problematic conventions and introduce productive alternatives. We introduce the notion of ‘dramaturgies of change’ to identify the dramaturgical interventions able to destabilise and reconfigure existing political regimes. We further offer the notion of the ‘dominant symbolic order’, a realm of stylistically stable but substantively flexible signifiers such as the crucifix and freedom, that actors must gain interpretive control of to lend legitimacy to their interventions. Using this framework to illuminate three examples – Nazism, the Civil Rights Movement, and Occupy – we argue that radical political change gains strength from symbolic conservatism.
AB - Against the backdrop of escalating climate change and widespread political dissatisfaction, calls are increasing for radical transformation of socioeconomic and political structures. But how such transformations could materialise remains an open question. In this article, we argue for alternative ways of understanding political stasis and change. Drawing on the established tradition of interpreting politics as theatre, we argue that dramaturgical analysis helps to spot problematic conventions and introduce productive alternatives. We introduce the notion of ‘dramaturgies of change’ to identify the dramaturgical interventions able to destabilise and reconfigure existing political regimes. We further offer the notion of the ‘dominant symbolic order’, a realm of stylistically stable but substantively flexible signifiers such as the crucifix and freedom, that actors must gain interpretive control of to lend legitimacy to their interventions. Using this framework to illuminate three examples – Nazism, the Civil Rights Movement, and Occupy – we argue that radical political change gains strength from symbolic conservatism.
KW - climate politics
KW - dramaturgical analysis
KW - political transformation
KW - Politics as theatre
KW - symbols in politics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105004477454&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/13684310251335608
DO - 10.1177/13684310251335608
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105004477454
SN - 1368-4310
JO - European Journal of Social Theory
JF - European Journal of Social Theory
ER -