Performativity Judith Butler originally made sense of the concept of performativity and subjectivities through gender roles. Foucault’s analysis of governmentality leads to “…a normative ideal which is unilaterally imposed by an external sovereign.” (Disch, 1999: 554). Drawing on Foucault’s argument that power is productive through governmentality, Butler describes this process as the subject comes into being through a matter of performativity (Mills, 2003: 258) and does so “…through conjoining
colonial rule. It was hypothesised in the literature review that the main causes for the revolution was because of economic and social inequalities as well as the exploitation of many citizens. Many scholars such as Sam P. Huntington, Karl Marx and Theda Skocpol have come with different arguments on the causation of the social revolution in Mexico and social revolutions as a whole. The commonality of the arguments made by academics regarding social revolutions, is that they all highlight the lack of ability
World-system theory is a macrosociological perspective that seeks to explain the dynamics of the “capitalist world economy” as a “total social system”(Vela, 2001). It is also known as the world-systems analysis or the world-systems perspective. Its first major connection is associated with Immanuel Wallerstein, who in 1974 published what is regarded as a seminal paper, “The Rise and Future Demise of the World Capitalist System: Concepts for Comparative Analysis”; in 1976 Wallerstein published “The