Pedagogies of the Poor: Resisting Resilience in Eastern Europe and Beyond

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/0208-6069.89.08

Keywords:

resilience, poverty, cinema, neoliberalism, commons, Roma, Eastern Europe, Béla Tarr

Abstract

This article illustrates the different ways in which the poor are being put to work, in defence of a global neoliberal order by global economic institutions concerned with constructing them as resilient subjects, as well as by opponents of neoliberalism concerned with galvanizing the revolutionary potentials of poor people. In spite of the apparent gulf between neoliberalism and its revolutionary opponents, the poor find themselves subject to remarkably similar strategies of construction by both proponents and opponents of neoliberalism today. This predicament of the poor is particularly vexed in Eastern Europe where strategies of resilience are fast developing, and critical legal theory has so far offered little resistance to this trend. Turning against this tide, this article considers how we might reimagine poverty and conceive its politics beyond and against clichéd images of the poor as resilient subjects. Through an analysis of the work of the Hungarian filmmaker Bela Tarr, it argues for the necessity of images capable of conveying the intolerability of the conditions in which the poor continue to live, as well as the contingency of those conditions; images that serve as interventions on narratives which would reduce the poor to a life of mere resilience.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Allen, Craig R. David G. Angeler. Ahjond S. Garmestani. Lance H. Gunderson. C. S. Holling. 2014. “Panarchy: Theory and Application”. Ecosystems 17(4): 578–589.
Google Scholar

Baar van, Huub. 2018. “Contained Mobility and the Racialization of Poverty in Europe: the Roma at the Development-security Nexus”. Social Identities: Journal for the Study of Race, Nation and Culture 24(4): 442–458.
Google Scholar

Banila, Nicoleta. 2018. “World Bank lending Romania 400 mln euro for disaster risk management”. SeeNews: Business Intelligence for South East Europe. https://seenews.com/news/world-bank-lending-romania-400-mln-euro-for-disaster-risk-management-617880
Google Scholar

Berlant, Lauren. 2011. Cruel Optimism. Durham: Duke University Press.
Google Scholar

Berlant, Lauren. 2016. “The Commons as Infrastructure for Troubling Times”. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 34(3): 393–419.
Google Scholar

Bohland, Jim. Simin Davoudi. Jennifer L. Lawrence. Eds. 2019. The Resilience Machine. New York: Routledge.
Google Scholar

Butler, Judith. Athena Athanasiou. 2013. Dispossession: The Performance in the Political. Cambridge: Polity.
Google Scholar

Chandler, David. Julian Reid. 2016. The Neoliberal Subject: Resilience, Adaptation and Vulnerability. London: Rowman and Littlefield.
Google Scholar

Cosens, Barbara A. 2013. “Legitimacy, Adaptation, and Resilience in Ecosystem Management”. Ecology & Society 18(1): 3.
Google Scholar

Craig, Anthony Arnold. Lance Gunderson. 2013. “Adaptive Law and Resilience”. Environmental Law Reporter 43: 10426–10443.
Google Scholar

Deleuze, Gilles. 1989. Cinema 2: The Time-Image. London: Athlone.
Google Scholar

Douzinas, Costas. Adam Gearey. 2005. Critical Jurisprudence: The Political Philosophy of Justice. Oxford and Portlan, OR: Hart Publishing.
Google Scholar

Evans, Brad. Julian Reid. 2014. Resilient Life: The Art of Living Dangerously. Oxford: Polity.
Google Scholar

Felli, Romain. 2016. “The World Bank’s Neoliberal Language of Resilience”. In Risking Capitalism. 267–295. Edited by Susanne Soederburg. Bingley: Emerald.
Google Scholar

Fisher, Pamela. Lisa Buckner. 2018. “Time for ‘Resilience’: Community Mediators Working with Marginalised Young People Offer a Novel Approach”. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 38(9/10): 794–808.
Google Scholar

Folke, Carl. Steve Carpenter. Thomas Elmqvist. Lance Gunderson. C. S. Holling. Brian Walker. 2002. “Resilience and Sustainable Development: Building Adaptive Capacity in a World of Transformations”. Ambio 31(5): 437–340.
Google Scholar

Ginn, Franklin. 2015. “When Horses Won’t Eat: Apocalypse and the Anthropocene”. The Annals of the Association of American Geographers 105(2): 351–359.
Google Scholar

Gorfinkel, Elena. 2012. “Weariness, Waiting: Enduration and Art Cinema’s Tired Bodies”. Discourse 34(2–3): 311–347.
Google Scholar

Grear, Anna. 2015. “Deconstructing Anthropos: A Critical Legal Reflection on ‘Anthropocentric’ Law and Anthropocene ‘Humanity’”. Law and Critique 26(3): 225–249.
Google Scholar

Hallegatte, Stephane. Adrien Vogt-Schilb. Mook Bangalore. Julie Rozenberg. 2017. Unbreakable: Building the Resilience of the Poor in the Face of Natural Disasters. Washington, DC: World Bank.
Google Scholar

Hardt, Michael. Antonio Negri. 2009. Commonwealth. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Google Scholar

I, Daniel Blake. 2016. Directed by Ken Loach. United Kingdom: Sixteen Films.
Google Scholar

In the Air. 2009. Directed by Liza Johnson.
Google Scholar

Kaun, Anne. Maria Francesca Murru. 2018. “Narrative Mediation of the Occupy Movement: A Case Study of Stockholm and Latvia”. In Media and Austerity: Comparative Perspectives. 226–236. Edited by Laura Basu, Steve Schifferes, Sophie Knowles. London: Routledge.
Google Scholar

Kiraly, Hajnal. 2015. “Leave to Live? Placeless People in Contemporary Hungarian and Romanian Films of Return”. Studies in Eastern European Cinema 6(2): 169–183.
Google Scholar

Lawrenson, Edward. 2011. “Edge of Darkness: The Turin Horse”. Film Quarterly 64(4): 66–67.
Google Scholar

Lendvay, Marton. 2016. “Resilience in Post-socialist Context: The Case of a Watermelon Producing Community in Hungary”. Hungarian Geographical Bulletin 65(3): 255–269.
Google Scholar

Mańko, Rafał. 2018. “Critique of the ‘Juridical’: Some Metatheoretical Remarks”. Journal of the University of Latvia. Law 11: 24–37.
Google Scholar

Mańko, Rafał. Cosmin Cercel. Adam Sulikowski. 2016. Law and Critique in Central Europe. Oxford: Counterpress.
Google Scholar

Menchaca, William. 2018. “Analyzing Poverty Disparities Between Eastern and Western Europe”. Borgen Magazine. http://www.borgenmagazine.com/poverty-disparities-between-eastern-and-western-europe/
Google Scholar

Morell, Ildikó Asztalos. Margaret Greenfields. David M. Smith. 2018. “Governing Underprivileged Roma Migrations within the EU: Receiving Country Responses and Roma Resilience”. Local Economy 33(2): 123–126.
Google Scholar

Pingali, Prabhu. Luca Alinovi. Jacky Sutton. 2005. „Food Security in Complex Emergencies: Enhancing Food System Resilience”. Disasters 29(51): 5–24.
Google Scholar

Rancière, Jacques. 2011. Bela Tarr, The Time After. Minneapolis: Univocal.
Google Scholar

Rear Window. 1954. Directed by Alfred Hitchcock. United States: Patron Inc.
Google Scholar

Reid, Julian. 2012. “The Disastrous and Politically Debased Subject of Resilience”. Development Dialogue 58: 67–79.
Google Scholar

Reid, Julian. 2013. “Interrogating the Sustainable Development-Resilience Nexus Biopolitically”. International Political Sociology 7: 353–368.
Google Scholar

Roberts, Phillip. 2017. “Control and Cinema: Intolerable Poverty and the Films of Bela Tarr”. Deleuze Studies 11(1): 68–94.
Google Scholar

Ruhl, J.B. 2012. “Panarchy and the Law”. Ecology & Society 17(3): 31.
Google Scholar

Rust, Stephen. Salma Monani. 2013. “Introduction: Cuts to Dissolves – Defining and Situating Ecocinema Studies” in Ecocinema Theory and Practice. 1–13. Edited by Stephen Rust, Salma Monani, Sean Cubitt. London: Routledge
Google Scholar

Smith, Adrian. Judit Timar. 2010. “Uneven Transformations: Space, Economy and Society 20 Years after the Collapse of State Socialism”. European Urban and Regional Studies 17(2): 115–125.
Google Scholar

Tandon, Nidhi. 2007. “Biopolitics, Climate Change and Water Security: Impact, Vulnerability and Adaptation Issues for Women”. Agenda 73: 4–20.
Google Scholar

Trawick, Paul. 2003. “Against the Privatization of Water: An Indigenous Model for Improving Existing Laws and Successfully Governing the Commons”. World Development 31(6): 977–996.
Google Scholar

The Turin Horse (A Torinói Ló). 2011. Directed by Béla Tarr. Hungary: TT Filmmûhely.
Google Scholar

UNDP [United Nations Development Programme]. 2018. Roma Data. http://www.eurasia.undp.org/content/rbec/en/home/ourwork/sustainable-development/development-planning-and-inclusive-sustainable-growth/roma-in-central-and-southeast-europe/roma-data.html
Google Scholar

UNEP [United Nations Environment Programme]. 2004. Exploring the Links: Human Well-Being, Poverty & Ecosystem Services. Nairobi: UN Publications.
Google Scholar

Yew-Foong, Hui. 2017. “The Umbrella Movement: Ethnographic Explorations of Communal Re-Spatialization”. International Journal of Cultural Studies 20(2): 146–161.
Google Scholar

Downloads

Published

2019-12-29

How to Cite

Reid, J. (2019). Pedagogies of the Poor: Resisting Resilience in Eastern Europe and Beyond. Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Iuridica, 89, 111–129. https://doi.org/10.18778/0208-6069.89.08