Forest Nymph
Forum Legend
Joyful Militancy: Building Thriving Resistance in Toxic Times
I think this is the most helpful of my assigned readings this semester. I'm not saying I haven't learned from or enjoyed others, but this book delves into the real talk. Of how people remain complacent or self-destruct instead of actively building community when faced with oppression or painful injustice, how activists find their real power in friendships and community rather than ideology, and how the rigid radical has become a trope, the constant criticizing of self and others for not living up to the perfect ideology or "should."
I can't help but think of DXE while reading this, and the way they're trying to stay away from the vegan label (despite technically being vegans) to reject this perfectionistic, angry rigidity in favor of building community and stay focused on the ethical action of animal liberation rather than the personal morality of veganism. I'm learning a lot through this personal example because I am so much the grumpy-warrior-cool rigid radical described in the book (for whom it is obviously written).
I love their approach because they're rigid radicals themselves so are quick to point out this isn't about becoming "polite" or "nice" or putting to rest our radical or anarchist views, because the world is in desperate need of change, but living fully and joyfully in the paradox of active resistance while being loving and creative. This is stated again and again as being accomplished through community-building where ethics are favored over personal morality. Which brings me back to "animal liberation" (ethics with a real world effect) vs. "vegan" (personal morality based in ideology). It's not about being "anti-vegan" or even wholly rejecting the word vegan (which I'm never gonna do), but understanding greater fulfillment, greater existence in something beyond myself and deeper joy will be found in building a community of fidelity and ethics rather than angrily isolating oneself in perfectionist morality.
I think this is the most helpful of my assigned readings this semester. I'm not saying I haven't learned from or enjoyed others, but this book delves into the real talk. Of how people remain complacent or self-destruct instead of actively building community when faced with oppression or painful injustice, how activists find their real power in friendships and community rather than ideology, and how the rigid radical has become a trope, the constant criticizing of self and others for not living up to the perfect ideology or "should."
I can't help but think of DXE while reading this, and the way they're trying to stay away from the vegan label (despite technically being vegans) to reject this perfectionistic, angry rigidity in favor of building community and stay focused on the ethical action of animal liberation rather than the personal morality of veganism. I'm learning a lot through this personal example because I am so much the grumpy-warrior-cool rigid radical described in the book (for whom it is obviously written).
I love their approach because they're rigid radicals themselves so are quick to point out this isn't about becoming "polite" or "nice" or putting to rest our radical or anarchist views, because the world is in desperate need of change, but living fully and joyfully in the paradox of active resistance while being loving and creative. This is stated again and again as being accomplished through community-building where ethics are favored over personal morality. Which brings me back to "animal liberation" (ethics with a real world effect) vs. "vegan" (personal morality based in ideology). It's not about being "anti-vegan" or even wholly rejecting the word vegan (which I'm never gonna do), but understanding greater fulfillment, greater existence in something beyond myself and deeper joy will be found in building a community of fidelity and ethics rather than angrily isolating oneself in perfectionist morality.