4.3 Article

Action dilemmas in prefigurative politics: making prefiguration feasible in Sweden

Journal

SOCIAL MOVEMENT STUDIES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14742837.2023.2296872

Keywords

Prefigurative politics; radical left; long-term activism; identity; Sweden; political projects

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Prefigurative political movements aim to create and maintain an alternative reality where activists can enact their desired future. This article examines the challenges faced by activists in sustaining such movements and presents three dilemmas they must solve: practical prefiguration, principled prefiguration, and purposeful prefiguration. The study also investigates the strategies used by long-term activists to address these problems and argues that prefigurative projects must balance present realities with future aspirations to survive.
Prefigurative political movements often attempt to create and maintain an alternative reality, where activists can enact and experiment with a desired future. Yet, sustained participation in a prefigurative project requires that individuals view this potential future as realizable and feasible. Based on a long-term ethnographic study of a radical left-libertarian movement in Sweden, I identify three dilemmas activists must solve to allow prefiguration to remain feasible, which I term practical prefiguration, principled prefiguration, and purposeful prefiguration. In practical prefiguration, individuals must find ways of balancing commitments and obligations from identities outside the movement with their identities as social movement participants. Principled prefiguration, conversely, focuses on the challenges prefigurative participants encounter as they attempt to translate broad, macro ideological principles into local interactional norms. Finally, purposeful prefiguration explores how activists maintain optimism, hope, and belief in a prefigurative project through creating and maintaining measures of success that are not based on instrumental social change. In this article, I investigate the strategies long-term activists used to solve these problems. I argue these strategies often require changes in movement form, tactics, and character as activists accommodate the realities of the present, which can potentially threaten the prefigurative nature of a political project. The article concludes by arguing that inequalities in prefigurative movements can arise from the solutions to these practical problems, but that prefigurative projects must find ways of balancing present and future if they wish to survive.

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