Some renewed vigor after the disability and mad pride march.
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Some renewed vigor after the disability and mad pride march.

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An increasing number of new films hinge on direct action â Ăna OâShea explores their potential to advance a culture of resistance. This article features spoilers for Iâm a Virgo, Code Name Jenny, Black 47 and How to Blow Up a Pipeline. (Leftist direct action thrillers: a new genre? | revsoc21)
Can you hear the people sing?
A 2021 state law allows campus police to own military equipment for civilian safety â students fear it may be used to quash dissent
Planning a mega Kent State ⌠Acoustic weapons that âcan cause permanent hearing damage even during a short exposureâ used 70 times in a single school year. In California alone, âhundreds of semi-automatic rifles, thousands of munitions containing the same chemical as chili peppers, and hundreds of thousands of rifle munitions.â

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My city's scene sucks in a lot of respects but paradoxically that's also kinda the reason the cool things that are here even exist. Sheffield's gay culture was pretty thin on the ground when I moved here, the couple of gay bars that had existed outside the gay quarter closed in the years before I arrived, then COVID killed the whole gay quarter except for one place: the notorious cruising spot for older gay men and the straight tourists who end up there at 3am with transphobic door staff and a generally sad, very white vibe.
For years my city's queer scene was just DL and t parties on Grindr and the kinda lame pride event which never started again after COVID. So people took it into their own hands, through direct action. A grassroots queer collective springs up to put on raves and other events with a focus on minority led organising and spaces. A mutual aid network grows and we provide eachother care, support goods and supplies. We make our own radical pride, no sponsors, no cops just community showing up for a kickass protest march from the steps of city hall to one of our many beautiful parks. Now the grassroots collective has its own venue in the centre of town that has recently had its lease bought by the community so that it's not at risk of being shut down any moment. Pride last weekend was a riot (metaphorically, a good fucking time), we shut down streets, took up space, made a lot of noise, wore our sexiest fits, the mic and PA were for bipoc speakers, disabled activists, sex workers. This weekend I'm hitting our venue for a hyperpop rave.
Basically, I'm very fucking proud of the incredible people in my community who have made this happen together, in a small post industrial northern city. They used to call Sheffield the socialist peoples republic of south Yorkshire, it's not a joke to me, there's passion and soul nestled in these seven hills.
Disrupting Order
A History and Theory of Direct Action
Abstract
Direct action, defined as the strategic use of immediately effective actsâsuch as strikes, occupations, blockades, and sabotageâto achieve social or political goals, bypasses institutional mechanisms of representation and redress. This article traces the historical evolution of direct action from 19th-century labor struggles and anti-colonial movements to late-20th-century identity-based and environmental activism. Theoretically, it examines direct action through three lenses: the anarchist tradition of propaganda by the deed and prefigurative politics; the Gandhian praxis of satyagraha and political jiu-jitsu; and the strategic pluralism of Gene Sharp, who framed nonviolent action as a form of political warfare. The article argues that direct action is not merely a tactic of the impatient but a distinct political logic rooted in the withdrawal of consent, the disruption of normalcy, and the embodied demonstration of alternative futures. By synthesizing historical practice and theoretical frameworks, this paper illuminates how direct action continues to challenge both the monopoly on violence and the monopoly on legitimate political expression held by modern states.
Keywords: direct action, civil disobedience, nonviolence, prefigurative politics, satyagraha, social movements
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1. Introduction
In the lexicon of social movements, few terms are as evocative and contested as âdirect action.â To its proponents, it is the highest form of democracy, a means by which ordinary people take power into their own hands without delegating it to representatives or elites. To its critics, it represents a dangerous rejection of the rule of law, a slide into mob rule or violent extremism. The term itself, originating in the syndicalist labor struggles of the early 20th century, encompasses a vast repertoire of contention: from the factory sit-down strike and the lunch counter sit-in, to the tree-sit and the massive shutdown of city centers, to digital denial-of-service attacks and mutual aid networks that function outside state provision. This article seeks to untangle the dense knot of history and theory surrounding direct action, arguing that it constitutes a coherent, if diverse, political logic.
Central to any definition of direct action is the concept of immediacy and the bypassing of intermediaries. As anarchist theorist Voltairine de Cleyre argued in her seminal 1912 essay, direct action is the antithesis of indirect or political action, where one acts through an agent. The worker who strikes does not petition the boss for better conditions; they use their own collective power to stop production. The anti-colonial resister does not merely write letters to the imperial metropole; they seize salt, occupy land, and withdraw their cooperation. This article will first chart the historical arc of direct action from its labor movement origins through anti-colonial liberation movements to its contemporary manifestations. Second, it will dissect the major theoretical contributions that have shaped its practice, focusing on anarchist, Gandhian, and pragmatist-strategic traditions. Finally, it will synthesize these threads to argue that direct action operates simultaneously as a coercive force, a communicative symbol, and a constitutive act of world-building.
2. A Historical Arc of Direct Action
The history of direct action is as old as political authority itself, but its self-conscious articulation as a strategy began with the rise of the modern labor movement and the modern state. The Industrial Revolution created a new form of concentrated, collective power: the capacity of workers to halt the machinery of production. This was not a request for negotiation; it was the direct application of economic force.
2.1 Industrial Origins: Syndicalism and the Strike
The term âdirect actionâ was popularized by the revolutionary syndicalist movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In France, the ConfĂŠdĂŠration GĂŠnĂŠrale du Travail (CGT) adopted the action directe as its core principle, seeing the general strike as the grand climacteric that would overthrow capitalism and the state. For syndicalists, political action via parliamentary socialism was a trap that co-opted working-class energy. Ămile Pouget, a leading CGT theorist, celebrated sabotageâthe âconscious withdrawal of efficiencyââas a form of direct action that shifted the balance of power by making exploitation unprofitable (Pouget, 1913). Across the Atlantic, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) echoed this philosophy, organizing unskilled workers into âOne Big Unionâ and wielding the sit-down strike and free speech fights not to lobby for legislative reform but to force immediate concessions and build a revolutionary counter-power (Dubofsky, 2000).
This period established a foundational principle: direct action is rooted in the material power of interdependence. Elites depend on the cooperation of workers, consumers, and citizens; the withdrawal of that cooperation is a coercive lever.
2.2 Anti-Colonial and Civil Rights Movements: Spiritualising Force
The next great evolution came with the application of mass direct action to anti-colonial and civil rights struggles, most notably through the work of Mohandas K. Gandhi. Gandhi translated the concept of the strike and boycott into a moral and spiritual register, coining the term satyagraha (truth-force). The 1930 Salt March was a masterclass in direct action: rather than petitioning the British Raj to repeal the salt tax, Gandhi and thousands of Indians marched to the sea to make their own salt, directly breaking an unjust law and simultaneously demonstrating the illegitimacy of colonial rule (Weber, 1997). Gandhiâs innovation was to fuse the coercive logic of the strike with a communicative and moral logic. The suffering endured by satyagrahis was not passive; it was an active force meant to convert the opponent.
Gandhiâs praxis deeply influenced Martin Luther King Jr., who adapted it to the American civil rights movement. The Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955-56), the Greensboro sit-ins (1960), and the Birmingham campaign (1963) were all forms of economic and social direct action designed to make continued racial segregation untenable. In his âLetter from a Birmingham Jail,â King articulated the theory behind the tactic: âNonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and foster such a tension that a community which has constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issueâ (King, 1963). Here, direct action is not an end in itself but a âcreative tensionâ machine, forcing latent conflict into the open where it cannot be ignored by the public or the state.
2.3 The New Social Movements: Prefiguration and Identity
From the 1960s onward, direct action became a defining feature of the ânew social movementsâ: feminism, environmentalism, nuclear disarmament, and LGBTQ+ rights. These movements expanded the repertoire beyond the labor-capital and colonial binaries, focusing on cultural norms, identity, and planetary survival. The direct action of the peace movement, such as the attempt by the âDonât Make a Wave Committeeâ (which became Greenpeace) to sail into a nuclear test zone in 1971, was a symbolic challenge to the nuclear stateâs claim over the commons. The occupation of the Alcatraz Island by the Indians of All Tribes (1969-71) directly reclaimed land based on treaty rights, rejecting the bureaucratic logic of the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
The AIDS crisis catalyzed one of the most sophisticated direct action campaigns in modern history. The AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) fused disruptive spectacleâsuch as a âdie-inâ at St. Patrickâs Cathedral to protest the Churchâs opposition to safe-sex educationâwith highly technical insider knowledge to directly seize control over the drug approval process at the FDA (Gould, 2009). ACT UPâs âSeize Control of the FDAâ action was not just symbolic; it directly resulted in structural changes that sped up drug releases. This era demonstrated that direct action could be simultaneously theatrical, identity-affirming, and concretely instrumental.
2.4 The Alter-Globalization and Climate Eras
The 1999 Seattle WTO protests, often cited as the birth of the alter-globalization movement, were a carnivalesque tapestry of direct action tactics: black blocs smashing corporate windows, mass blockades employing âtripodsâ and lock-boxes, and giant puppets parading through the streets. This âdiversity of tacticsâ signaled a pragmatic and often acrimonious coexistence of different direct action philosophies within a single movement. The subsequent Occupy Wall Street (2011) encampments reintroduced the occupation as a long-term tactic, prefiguring a world beyond capitalism by creating temporary autonomous zones with general assemblies, free kitchens, and direct democracy. Most recently, Extinction Rebellion and Just Stop Oil have channeled direct action into a framework of âcivil resistanceâ against climate collapse, using mass arrest as a performative tactic of public sacrifice and disruption to force government action, explicitly drawing on Gene Sharpâs pragmatic theories while dramatizing an existential emergency.
3. Theoretical Architectures of Direct Action
The diverse practices above are undergirded by distinct theoretical traditions. These are not airtight boxes but overlapping logics that actors draw upon when framing their actions.
3.1 The Anarchist Tradition: Propaganda of the Deed and Prefiguration
Anarchist theory provides the most extensive philosophical justification for direct action as a principle of life, not just a tactic. For classical anarchists, direct action was the logical corollary of a rejection of the state and capital. The state is fundamentally an institution of mediated violence and hierarchy; to petition it is to recognize its legitimacy. Direct action, in contrast, asserts oneâs own capacity for self-organization. Mikhail Bakuninâs emphasis on the âcreative instinctâ of the masses to build a new society âin the shell of the oldâ prefigures the modern concept of prefigurative politicsâthe idea that the means of struggle must embody the ends (Bakunin, 1873).
The tradition of âpropaganda of the deed,â a 19th-century anarchist concept advocating insurrectionary acts to spark wider rebellion, has evolved significantly. Its contemporary interpretation, as developed by David Graeber, focuses less on violent insurrection and more on the âprovision of alternative services and the creation of counter-institutionsâ (Graeber, 2009, p. 233). Graeberâs analysis of the Occupy movement centers on the âforce of example.â The construction of a working consensus-based community in Zuccotti Park was not a symbolic gesture aimed at the state; it was the thing itself, a lived direct challenge to the necessity of state and capitalist structures. This theoretical strain reframes direct action away from a utilitarian logic of coercion and toward an expressive and ontological one: by acting as if you are already free, you demonstrate the possibility of that freedom to yourself and others.
3.2 The Gandhian Tradition: Satyagraha and Political Jiu-Jitsu
Gandhiâs theoretical contribution is encapsulated in the concept of satyagraha, or soul-force. This is a direct action strategy that repudiates not only physical violence but also the structural violence of humiliation and hatred. Crucially, Gandhi formulated the mechanism of political jiu-jitsu, a more sophisticated version of the âcreative tensionâ King described. The theory posits that when a nonviolent resister endures brutal repression without retaliating, the moral asymmetry can cause the pillars of support for the oppressorâthe public, the bureaucracy, the policeâto shift their loyalties, ultimately disintegrating the regimeâs power (Sharp, 1973, drawing on Gandhi).
For Gandhi, the Salt March was not a symbolic protest; it was an act of constructive resistance that structurally undermined the colonial economy and monopoly on law. The making of salt was a direct reconstruction of a self-sufficient India. Thus, Gandhian theory, while often cast as a form of moral appeal, contains a hard-headed strategic calculus. The suffering is a weapon, and the refusal of cooperation is a structural attack. This theoretical corpus was later systematized by Gene Sharp, who moved it from a spiritual logic to a universalistic, pragmatist science of âcivilian-based defense,â stripping away much of its religious underpinning to argue that all political power is based on obedience and consent, and that its nonviolent withdrawal can dismantle even brutal dictatorships (Sharp, 2005).
3.3 Strategic Pragmatism and the Diversity of Tactics
The third major theoretical current is a deliberately anti-ideological pragmatism. This approach, dominant in much contemporary organizing, treats direct action as a toolbox from which to choose the most effective instrument for a specific goal. Sharpâs catalogue of 198 methods of nonviolent action is the canonical text of this school, framing everything from vigils to economic shutdowns as technically distinct weapons in a common arsenal (Sharp, 1973). The power of this approach is its focus on political jiu-jitsu as a predictable dynamic of power, independent of the actorâs personal morality.
A crucial debate within this pragmatic tradition is the âdiversity of tacticsâ argument, which advocates for the coexistence of nonviolent mass action alongside property destruction or black bloc tactics. Proponents argue that rigid adherence to a single code of conduct is a fetter, and that a strategic division of laborâwhere some actors create a militant flank that makes nonviolent negotiators appear more reasonableâis maximally effective. This is a purely instrumental theory of direct action, discarding prefigurative consistency for strategic impact. It remains highly controversial, with critics in the Gandhian and anarchist-prefigurative traditions arguing that certain tactics, particularly those that alienate broader public support or reproduce the violence of the system, are strategically self-defeating and ethically bankrupt.
4. The Logics of Direct Action: Coercion, Communication, and Constitution
Synthesizing the history and theory, we can identify three interwoven logics at work in direct action. First is a logic of coercion, most evident in the strike and blockade. By physically interrupting the flows of capital, goods, or governance, actors impose a material cost that forces an opponent to bargain or yield. This is the power to stop things.
Second is a logic of communication. Actions like the ACT UP die-in or the Extinction Rebellion funeral march are designed as dramatic, symbolic acts of persuasion and agenda-setting. They make the invisible visible, forcing a moral or political question into the public sphere. This is the power to say things effectively through embodied performance.
Third, and most profoundly, is a logic of constitution. This is the prefigurative core of direct action. The free school, the occupied social center, the strike-run factory, the mutual aid network, the autonomous communeâthese actions do not just protest the world as it is; they create a practical model of the world as it ought to be. This power is not about coercing an enemy or communicating a message to an audience, but about building a new lived reality directly, rendering the old structures redundant. It is in this third logic that direct action transcends mere protest and becomes the very practice of freedom.
5. Conclusion
Direct action is a polychromatic political instrument, a language of power spoken in the grammar of the body, the collective, and the disrupted material world. Its history traces a movement from the economic foundations of the strike to the moral and symbolic terrains of anti-colonial and identity struggles, and finally to the networked, prefigurative, and existential actions of the contemporary climate movement. Its theory is a contested field between those who see it as a moral force of conversion, those who see it as a pragmatic arsenal of political warfare, and those for whom it is an intrinsically valuable act of building a world beyond domination.
What unites these threads is the foundational concept of agency without intercession. In an era of profound democratic crisis, where representative institutions appear captured or incapable of addressing systemic threats like climate change, the theory and practice of direct action offer a compelling, if demanding, alternative. It rests on the radical proposition that people can, and must, do for themselves what their governments will not, acting not as subjects petitioning power, but as citizens wielding it directly.
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References
Bakunin, M. (1873). Statism and Anarchy. Cambridge University Press. (1990 reprint).
de Cleyre, V. (1912). Direct Action. In The Anarchist Library. Retrieved from archive.org.
Dubofsky, M. (2000). We Shall Be All: A History of the Industrial Workers of the World. University of Illinois Press.
Gandhi, M. K. (1930). The Story of My Experiments with Truth. Navajivan Publishing House.
Gould, D. B. (2009). Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UPâs Fight against AIDS. University of Chicago Press.
Graeber, D. (2009). Direct Action: An Ethnography. AK Press.
King, M. L., Jr. (1963). Letter from a Birmingham Jail. The Atlantic Monthly, 212(2), 78-88.
Pouget, Ă. (1913). Sabotage. C. H. Kerr & Co.
Sharp, G. (1973). The Politics of Nonviolent Action. Porter Sargent Publishers.
Sharp, G. (2005). Waging Nonviolent Struggle: 20th Century Practice and 21st Century Potential. Extending Horizons Books.
Weber, T. (1997). On the Salt March: The Historiography of Gandhiâs March to Dandi. HarperCollins Publishers India.