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The application of Critical Theory to crowds—examining how crowd behavior is understood, how crowds are managed, and how they relate to power. Critical Theory of the Crowds asks: How are crowds portrayed—as dangerous mobs or as democratic assemblies? Who decides? How do authorities manage crowds through policing, architecture, and media? What power do crowds have when they gather? Drawing on thinkers like Le Bon, Canetti, and contemporary protest studies, it insists that crowds are never just crowds—they're political phenomena, sites of possibility and fear. Understanding crowds requires understanding who's watching, who's controlling, and who's participating.
"Crowds turn into mobs, they say. Critical Theory of the Crowds asks: says who? The same crowd that's a 'mob' to authorities is a 'movement' to participants. Crowds have power—the power to disrupt, to demand, to be seen. Critical theory insists on asking: who's afraid of crowds, and why? And what happens when crowds refuse to disperse?"
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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