Crowds, Race, Colonialism: On Resuscitating Classical Crowd Theory
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Published:2023-06
Issue:2
Volume:90
Page:245-269
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ISSN:1944-768X
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Container-title:Social Research: An International Quarterly
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language:en
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Short-container-title:sor
Abstract
Abstract: Crowd psychologist Gustave Le Bon is often seen as emblematic of fin-de-siècle crowd theory. Widely read in the 1890s, Le Bon's work was later critiqued for its gendered descriptions and political biases. This essay reconsiders fin-de-siècle crowd theory in light of postcolonial critique and asks whether parts of this tradition merit attention in discussion of crowd action today. While Le Bon's work is based on a racial hierarchy and subscribes to a colonial episteme, the situation is more complex when it comes to sociologists such as Gabriel Tarde and Émile Durkheim. While elements of their work can be subjected to postcolonial critique, their theorization on crowds points to distinctly collective dimensions of crowd action that are important to revive.