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Collectivism after Modernism - autonomous learning - Blogs

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236 Okwui Enwezor<br />

and economic crisis of the last decade of Mobutu’s corrupt, dictatorial misrule<br />

as Congolese civil society began a process of realignment. Taking its<br />

name from the biblical prophet Amos who in the Old Testament is identiWed<br />

with the struggle for social justice, the grassroots activist movement<br />

initiated by members of Le Groupe Amos evolved, in the context of the<br />

Democratic Republic of Congo, an extension of the tactics found in Latin<br />

American liberation theology, infusing their activism with the ethics of civil<br />

disobedience and “creative non-violent action” 30 inspired by Ghandi’s philosophy<br />

and Martin Luther King Jr.’s work. As a collective, one of their<br />

principal quests was how to deal with the crisis of legitimation facing millions<br />

of disempowered Congolese silenced by the venality of a brutal regime.<br />

In a way there was an idealism surrounding this quest, especially when it<br />

concerns the choice to offer a different critical option to the Congolese<br />

public beyond the armed rebellion being waged against Mobutu in order to<br />

free the subjective force of their repressed society by means of direct action.<br />

Four points are important in the work and conception of Le Groupe Amos.<br />

The Wrst is its identiWcation with the political, social, and cultural aspirations<br />

of the ordinary Congolese. This means that all its works, which often<br />

take a didactic format, are produced both in French—the ofWcial lingua<br />

franca of the state—and in the vernacular, Lingala, the language of everyday<br />

discourse among ordinary people in Kinshasa. The second aspect of the<br />

group is its relationship to the sphere of politics and institutional power. Here,<br />

FIGURE 8.2. Le Groupe Amos installation, “Documenta 11,” Germany, June–September 2002.

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