“…The different forms for which insurrection is manifest coincide with socio-political and historical power relations, ranging from mass strikes and different forms of political and social activism that respond to the Fordist model of production, through to the decentralized, flexible, 'Uberized' economy and associated creative forms of public and organized resistance, epitomized in new terms like "the multitude," "horizontalism," "radical democracy," "occupation," "hacktivism," "bossnapping," "sickouts" and the so-called "post-work movement" (Hardt & Negri, 2004;Juris, 2008;Parsons, 2013;Sitrin, 2017;Weeks, 2011). Looking at these "new" forms of insurrection invites us to interrogate and broaden the meaning of "the political" to include tactics, forms of organizing, discourses and strategies that might not only challenge the status quo and the existing distributions of power, but also try to envision and enact new subjectivities, meanings and alternative modes of socioeconomic, political, cultural, and political organizing (Daskalaki & Kokkinidis, 2017;Hardt & Negri, 2004;Juris & Khasnabish, 2013). However, such efforts can be interpreted as too large, broad, or vague which, while helpful in creating a unifying frame -such as the famous claim to speak for the 99% in the case of Occupy, or the "Que se vayan todos" in the 2001-2002 Argentinian street protests, or the "Democracia Real Ya" for the Indignados in Spain -are seen as potentially limiting their political traction by not signalling a clear ideological consensus or an identifiable target (Calhoun, 2013), not being realistic, or not offering a clear alternative (Castells, 2012;Gitlin, 2012).…”