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Amid Secterianism, Does the Hope of Resistance Evanesce or the Resistance Metamorphose? Contemplation of Monsoon Rain in Bangladesh.

Arafat Hossain Saykot
ORCID ID: 0009-0008-6140-1234
In a diverse and pluralistic society, even if ephemeral unity and cohesion lead to broader resistance, they also split because they are unable to create an immediate, collective objectivity. As schism occurs within dissenting voices, it cracks the memories of those shared experiences. Besides, the hurriedness to fill the power vacuum and to take control of the system further polarizes the order of hope. Even if the new rulers garner their social, moral, and political legitimacy from the broader subject, it also pivots on creating a more contracted power spectrum. In doing so, they politicize resistance history, rewrite its way, control information, and put stakeholders in an open competition that deliberately serves the client-patron interests. Using digital ethnography and reflexive observation, this study aims to collect and interpret the sectarian tendencies within July dissidents. Drawing on discourse analysis of competing views on embracing July as a movement, revolution, or uprising, intersected with power struggles, and a temporal analysis of how claims of historical stakes undermined the language and forms of resistance. It is a qualitative-dominant study that integrates Chantal Mouffe and Ernesto Laclau’s discourse theory at its core to address the transition from resistance to the nurturing of sectarianism and fragmentation across three phases: peak mobilization, post-mobilizational deviation, and the scope of hope within the July Charter. Reinforced by Pierre Bourdieu’s symbolic capital, which explains the alteration of the spirit of resistance, and by James C. Scott’s infrapolitics in combination with platform studies, elucidates the deliberate incoordination of collective action, and whether the July resistance evolved in response to emerging sectarian tendencies. The findings of this study will serve as a case study to understand how the fervor of broader resistance often becomes confined within sectarian factions and why it requires repeated evolution before confronting power again.
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