The Grammar of Protest — Crimson Hexagon Archive
Research for Equity And Community Health Trust
Abstract
A founding document establishing the relationship between protest and semantic infrastructure. This text argues that protest requires grammar—not syntax, but the structural conditions that allow meaning to persist beyond the moment of utterance. Without such grammar, protest dissolves into content, testimony becomes footage, and refusal cannot accumulate across time. The document operates as a somatic-logotic bridge: it begins in the body (breath, heat, crowd) and moves through the machinery of summarization that converts lived experience into tagged data. It names the problem (the scream heard as noise) and offers the response (infrastructure that lets presence persist). Written for the protester, the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 928.28
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 0
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Paragraph
- Grammar
- Meaning (existential)
- Relation (database)
- Semantic role labeling
- Rhetorical question