Chronicle of an Insurgent Utopia

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Electronic versions

In contrast to the utopian fantasies of the state, an insurgent utopia surges up from below rather than being imposed from above and is rooted in the urgency of immediate necessity, rather than in technocratic dreams of perfect social order. This chapter chronicles the emergence of an insurgent utopia in the oil-producing region of the Ecuadorian Amazon. It begins with a process of radical awakening to the deepening socio-ecological crisis of the region, which confronted the population with the Real of capitalist development in the form of despoiled landscapes, ruined livelihoods, rampant diseases, and vast disparities of wealth and power. The recognition of a common struggle against seemingly impossible odds dissolved the differences between the settler and Indigenous populations and united them in a community of the dispossessed. This unity took the material form of an uprising that jammed the gears of capital accumulation and forced the redirection of oil rents to the region. But those involved in the uprising do not describe it as a bitter struggle for economic justice, but as a carnivalesque inversion of reality, in which the established order was abruptly inverted, and the utopian dimension of egalitarian freedom was directly lived by those with nothing left to lose.

Keywords

  • dystopia, utopia, psychogeography
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationRethinking Democracy for Post-Utopian Worlds
Subtitle of host publicationAlternative Political Projects After the Sovereign State
EditorsJorge Leon Casero, Julia Urabayen
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Pages193-206
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Jun 2024
View graph of relations