We Were Here, and We Still Are: Negotiations of Political Space Through Unsanctioned Art

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Abstract

In this chapter, we examine the work of the Sámi artist Anders Sunna and the Egyptian artist Bahia Shebab in order to address strategies of artistic criticism of the relations between states and their citizens. Both artists are protesting against contemporary processes relating to space, state and nation, and they express themselves in ways that are embedded in the aesthetics of unsanctioned street art. This expression constitutes an interesting form of politics, situated somewhere in-between, or alongside, party politics and the practices of civil society. Our aim is to describe and discuss what we see as specifically effective and dynamic themes in the chosen artwork-the use of space as object and methodology, and the production of iconic imageries within fantasies of protest. The stencils and spray paintings of Shehab and Sunna offer us keys to exploring efforts to artistically reveal and dismantle national and neocolonial power.

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APA

Berg, L., & Lundgren, A. S. (2020). We Were Here, and We Still Are: Negotiations of Political Space Through Unsanctioned Art. In Pluralistic Struggles in Gender, Sexuality and Coloniality: Challenging Swedish Exceptionalism (pp. 49–80). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47432-4_3

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