Abstract

This paper holds that the interdisciplinary work of Elias Canetti contains the description and justification of two counterpower phenomena, crowds and metamorphosis, and that they emerge from an underlying thought of ethical and collaterally sociopolitical connotations. This interpretation is argued from an analysis of the main Canettian concepts related to power, crowds and metamorphosis, taking into account their relational coherence and the attention paid to them from other intellectual sources. The conclusion is reached that crowds are only conditionally endorsed, as a phenomenon of temporal counterpower, while metamorphosis is considered by the author as the truly effective anthropological and intellectual means against power.