Protest (original) (raw)
Protest expresses relatively overt reaction to events or situations: sometimes in favour, more often opposed. Protestors may undertake direct action or use more indirect means to publicise their feelings/opinions.
Causes
Wherever governmental policy, economic circumstances, religious orthodoxy, social structures, or media monopoly restrict self-expression in theory, in practice or in appearance, grumbles or interior opposition may spill over into other areas such as culture, the streets or emigration.
Historical Examples
Unaddressed protest may grow and foster dissent, activism, riots, insurgency, revolts, and political and/or social revolution, as in:
- Northern Europe in the early 16th century (see Protestant Reformation)
- North America in the 1770s (see American Revolution)
- France in 1789 (see French Revolution)
- United States of America in the late 20th-century (see for example Stonewall riots)
- Serbia in 2000.
Forms of Protest
Canonical forms of protest include:
- parts of the Anti-globalization movement
- boycotts
- Charta 77
- civil disobedience
- some cases of culture jamming
- demonstrations
- flag-burning
- non-violent protest
- occupation
- picketing
- protest marches
- protest songs
- certain classes of publicity stunt
- samizdat and zines
- sit-ins
- die-ins
- strike action
- terrorism
See also
- Global protests against war in Iraq in 2003 (both before the war and during the war)
- List of protests
Note: In American English the verb "protest" often acts transitively: The students protested the policy. Elsewhere we still find intransitive usage: The students protested against the policy; or: The students protested in favour of the policy.