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DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170718T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170718T213000
DTSTAMP:20260616T104056
CREATED:20170430T142310Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170718T012948Z
UID:10006183-1500406200-1500413400@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Women’s Liberation Movement: 1968-1975
DESCRIPTION:Jenny Brown\nTuesday\, July 18 and 25\, 7:30-9:30 pm \nReadings provided by Jenny for this series: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B_eXN8wqn-HgaEpVaVlLOU1UTVk \nJULY 18 Origins & Theory: The Women’s Liberation Movement is rooted in the Black-led Southern Civil Rights Movement and most of its theory pioneers\, white and Black\, were full-time workers in that movement. They also drew from Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex. As the Black Freedom movement turned to Black Power\, feminists took theory from Black Power and applied it to their newborn movement. We’ll read original sources from both the Black-led and majority-white branches of women’s liberation.  \nJULY 25 The Power of History: This class will analyze what made the 1960s Women’s Liberation Movement spread fast and win victories\, and also what made it vulnerable to watering down and liberal takeover. We will read analyses from Women’s Liberation Movement organizers written after the height of the movement’s power. \nJenny Brown is an organizer with National Women’s Liberation and has been involved in feminist theory and organizing since 1988\, first with Gainesville Women’s Liberation in Gainesville\, Florida and then with the Redstockings Women’s Liberation Archives for Action\, a movement think-tank and archive based in New York. She co-authored the Redstockings book\, Women’s Liberation and National Healthcare: Confronting the Myth of America and the Labor Notes book How to Jump Start Your Union: Lessons from the Chicago Teachers along with numerous essays and articles. She was also a co-chair of a Labor Party Local Organizing Committee in Gainesville\, Florida and is a former editor of Labor Notes. \nThose who have enrolled in the ongoing New Left series are already registered for these two sessions \nPrices below are sliding scale. No one is turned away for inability to pay.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/womens-liberation-movement-1968-1975/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/WomensLiberationCommons.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Beginnings of a New Left":MAILTO:revsgroup@gmail.com
GEO:40.6869154;-73.9855868
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170506T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170506T170000
DTSTAMP:20260616T104056
CREATED:20170205T180329Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170430T143415Z
UID:10006145-1494082800-1494090000@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Reading “Finally Got The News”: 3rd Sessions\, Part 4
DESCRIPTION:The 3rd Four-Week Session\nA reading group facilitated by Lisa Maya Knauer of The Marxist Education Project and members of Interference Archive \nAll are welcome to join at any session! \nThe 70s were a turbulent decade for the left\, both in the U.S. and worldwide – from the student protests against the U.S. invasion of Cambodia in 1970\, through the Nicaraguan and Iranian revolutions.  \nThis reading group\, designed to accompany Interference Archives’ exhibit Finally Got The News will explore some of the key liberation movements of the 1970s U.S. through the lens of written documents included in the exhibition\, as well as excerpts from publications by the activists and intellectuals who led\, chronicled and theorized about them. This is not a nostalgia trip\, but an opportunity to critically examine some important and often-overlooked threads of our collective history in order to inform our own politics of liberation in the 21st century.  \nOur reading will be divided into three four-week sessions\, using key protest events as entry points into the larger issues that they embodied.In each session\, we will try to put the social movements we examine into dialogue with each other — as they generally were at the time. Often\, individuals became politicized through one specific protest or movement\, which then opened up an array of questions and issues\, so there were a lot of flows of people and ideas between and among movements. Reading sessions will take place at Interference Archive on the Saturdays listed below\, from 3-5pm. Please email info@interferencearchive.org if you would like to participate\, so that we can provide access to reading material. All who pre-register will receive reading materials for the first session in advance. \nThe reading group is a collective undertaking\, and we welcome those whose entry in radical politics came long after the events we are studying as well as veterans of those movements. \nPart One: (February 25 remaining session—come join in at any time!) \nWe’ll start with the Detroit Revolutionary Union Movement (DRUM)\, the role of race in the formation of the U.S. working class\, and trade union radicalism as an alternative to business unionism. We will then read about the prisoners’ revolt and brutal put-down at Attica\, looking at the naked exercise of militarized state power and the growth of the prison-industrial complex. Saturday\, February 25 will be a discussion of the politics\, writings and assassination of George Jackson and the aftermath. \nPart Two: (March 11\, 18\, 25\, and April 1) \nNext\, we turn to the American Indian Movement and the 1973 stand-off at Wounded Knee\, echoes of which resonated through the encampments at Standing Rock. We’ll then continue to talk about the interaction of social movements and the state while looking at the New York City fiscal crisis\, the politics of austerity\, grassroots responses\, and anti-authoritarianism. The role of finance capital in imposing deep cuts on working people’s lives in 1975 will begin in the second part of the discussion on March 25. \nPart Three: (April 15\, 22\, 29\, and May 6) \nThinking broadly about decolonization\, we’ll look at how the 1975 Portuguese revolution and the independence struggle Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau provide an opportunity to explore the relationship between colonialism and national liberation. The 1979 Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua opens a window into Latin American revolutionary struggles and the challenges to U.S. imperialism in former client-states. We will then delve into radical feminism and its sometimes uneasy relationship with Marxism and socialism\, and we’ll continue our discussion of sexual politics in the gay and lesbian movements. \nLisa Maya Knauer is a lifelong radical who came of age politically in the 1960s and 1970s. She was active in the anti-war\, civil rights\, women’s\, farmworkers support\, anti-apartheid and other movements. She moved to New York in 1977 and quickly immersed herself in the New York left. She found the School for Marxist Education in the phone book and joined the Marxist Education Collective\, and has been involved with this educational undertaking through its various incarnations\, including the Marxist Education Project. In her day job\, she is a tenured radical at a public university and does research on indigenous resistance in Guatemala and immigrant worker organizing in the U.S. \nThe Marxist Education Project (MEP) has been formed as a place to study\, and to work to consciously identify what questions we must address and together answer\, each bringing to the discussion our diverse locations and experiences within society as a whole. We are confronting great possibilities and great challenges which require that we socially and politically find common ground while embracing not only our own but also each others different needs as our own into one organized emancipatory voice that represents the needs and aspirations of all humanity with social and political programs to begin the remediation of ourselves and our relations to each other and the ecology of our planet. In this first quarter of the 21st Century it has become clear that we as a species have a great challenge and responsibility—to bring together all our different needs and knowledge into an organized and diverse political force that can not only impede the prerogatives of an imperialist capitalism but also start to put in place means for transitioning to different ways of producing while in doing so we take into account all the needs of nature. In the next year we will begin offering classes and events in other boroughs and neighboring cities including Saturday morning sessions in Newark. \nInterference Archive: The mission of Interference Archive is to explore the relationship between cultural production and social movements. This work manifests in an open stacks archival collection\, publications\, a study center\, and public programs\, all of which encourage critical and creative engagement with the rich history of social movements. \nThe archive contains many kinds of objects that are created as part of social movements by the participants themselves: posters\, flyers\, publications\, photographs\, books\, tee shirts and buttons\, moving images\, audio recordings\, and other materials. \nThrough our programming\, we use this cultural ephemera to animate histories of people mobilizing for social transformation. We consider the use of our collection to be a way of preserving and honoring histories and material culture that is often marginalized in mainstream institutions. \nAs an all-volunteer organization\, all members of our community are welcome and encouraged to shape our collection and programming; we are a space for all volunteers to learn from each other and develop new skills. We work in collaboration with like-minded projects\, and encourage critical as well as creative engagement with our own histories and current struggles. \nAs an archive from below\, we are a collectively run space that is people powered\, with open stacks and accessibility for all. We are supported by the community that believes in what we’re doing. \nAdmission to the reading group is free to all. Contributions are accepted.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/reading-finally-got-the-news-2/
LOCATION:Interference Archive\, 131 8th Street\, No. 4\, Brooklyn\, NY\, 11215\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Change,Immigration,Indigenous Peoples,Labor History,Science and Technology,Socialism
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20161012T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20161012T213000
DTSTAMP:20260616T104056
CREATED:20160901T034206Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160901T034206Z
UID:10003744-1476300600-1476307800@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Transnational Feminism
DESCRIPTION:Literary and Cultural Perspectives on Terror\na talk by Basuli Deb \nco-sponsored by the Theater of the Oppressed Laboratory (TOPLAB) toplab.org \nIn this talk\, writer and researcher Basuli Deb will discuss some of the issues addressed in her book\, Transnational Feminist Perspectives on Terror in Literature and Culture\, which offers a transnational feminist response to the gender politics of torture and terror from the viewpoint of populations of color who have come to be associated with acts of terror. Using the War on Terror in Afghanistan and Iraq\, Deb visits other such racialized wars in Palestine\, Guatemala\, India\, Algeria\, and South Africa. Her research draws widely on postcolonial literature\, photography\, films\, music\, interdisciplinary arts\, media/new media\, and activism\, and joins the larger conversation about human rights by addressing the problem of a pervasive public misunderstanding of terrorism conditioned by a foreign and domestic policy perspective. Diverging from an international security studies lens\, Deb provides an alternative understanding of terrorism through a postcolonial and transnational feminist lens grounded in history. Her analysis brings counter-terror narratives into dialogue with ideologies of gender\, race\, ethnicity\, nationality\, class\, and religion\, and addresses the situation of women as both perpetrators and targets of torture\, and looks at the possibilities for a dialogue between feminist and queer politics that might lead to confronting securitized regimes of torture. \nBasuli Deb is a faculty member at CUNY and a 2016-2017 Global Scholar at the Institute for Research on Women at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. Her first book\, Transnational Feminist Perspectives on Terror in Literature and Culture is a gendered analysis of a pervasive public misunderstanding of terrorism conditioned by neoliberal foreign and domestic policy perspectives. It was published by Routledge in 2014. At Rutgers\, Deb will be working on her next book\, Indigenous Lives and Diasporic Aspirations\, which brings together the abuses of indigenous and immigrant populations in a queer feminist conversation about national and international securitization and its blindspots. Deb’s queer feminist critique of securitization also extends to celebrity studies in another book project she is working on called Celebrity Lifestyles and Public Intellectualism. Her peer-reviewed essays have been published in leading feminist and postcolonial studies journals and collections\, among them Frontiers\, Meridians\, Postcolonial Text\, South Asian Review\, Journal of Commonwealth Studies\, and Atlantic Literary Review. She has also co-edited a celebrity studies collection and a special issue of Postcolonial Text. Deb is a nationally and internationally recognized public speaker on feminist and postcolonial issues with a record of long-standing feminist leadership in the academic profession.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/transnational-feminism/
LOCATION:United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/TransFeminism_Commons.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20160715T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20160715T213000
DTSTAMP:20260616T104056
CREATED:20160705T023552Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160715T052716Z
UID:10006039-1468576800-1468618200@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Marxist Summer Intensive: July 15-17
DESCRIPTION:21st Century Class Struggles and the Generalized Proletariat:\nFurther Lessons towards Working Class Consciousness within our Social Movements\nThursday\, July 14 through Sunday\, July 17 \nFeaturing: Mitch Abidor\, Kazembe Balagun\, Mark Bergfeld\, Rebecca Boger\, Dennis Broe\, Charmaine Chua\, Claude Copeland\, Marika Diaz\, Russell Dale\, Walter Daum\, Pete Dolack\, Kate Doyle-Griffiths\, Mark Dudzic\, Anthony Galluzzo\, Janet Gerson. Harmony Goldberg\, Marcus Graetsch\, Ursula Huws\, Dan Karan\, Lisa Maya Knauer\, Kristin Lawler\, Laurel Mei-Singh\, Ras Moshe\, Fred Murphy\, Manny Ness\, Stuart Newman\, Marie-Claire Picher\, David Schwartzman and Yuko Tonohira.\n \nWritings to read if you have the time: \nSusan Watkins from New Left Review\, survey 2014 \nhttps://newleftreview.org/II/90/susan-watkins-the-political-state-of-the-union \nSusan Watkins\, 2016\nhttps://newleftreview.org/II/98/susan-watkins-oppositions\nMarc Dudzic and Adolf Reed Jr from Socialist Register on Crisis of Left and Labor in the US \nhttp://www.commondreams.org/sites/default/files/dudzic_and_reed_the_crisis_of_labour_and_the_left_in_the_united_states_sr_2015.pdf \nA Selection from the blog of Ursula Huws (if you have time read more of her postings\, listed off to the side on her blog) \nhttps://ursulahuws.wordpress.com/2016/06/25/the-unmaking-of-the-english-working-class/ \nhttps://ursulahuws.wordpress.com/2015/05/18/uber-and-under/ \nhttps://ursulahuws.wordpress.com/2014/12/10/a-workhouse-without-walls/ \nMitch Abidor\nOn Paris\, May ’68 \nhttp://insurgentnotes.com/2016/06/may-68-revisited/ \nIan Birchall’s response to Mitch:  \nhttp://insurgentnotes.com/2016/06/response-to-may-68-revisited/ \nKazembe Balagun\nIn The Guardian\, 2011 \nhttps://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/mar/17/race-protest\non the Fanon Phenomenon in The Indypendent: https://indypendent.org/2014/12/16/fanon-phenomenon-documentary-unearths-africas-anti-colonial-struggles \nMark Bergfeld \nhttps://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/05/the-next-portuguese-revolution/ \nAbout Mark in 2011 as activist:  \nhttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/8440413/Student-protests-The-Marxist-revolutionary-aiming-to-lead-the-NUS.html \nDennis Broe\nOn the World Film Beat with recent Cannes reports:  \nhttp://politicalfilmcritics.blogspot.fr/p/world-film-beat.html? \nThe most most recent article of Dennis in Situations on Mediterranean Noir:  \nhttp://ojs.gc.cuny.edu/index.php/situations/article/view/1706/1614? \nRussell Dale from Situtations: \nhttp://ojs.gc.cuny.edu/index.php/situations/article/view/1631/1581 \nCharmaine Chua:  \nhttps://thedisorderofthings.com/2014/09/09/logistics-capitalist-circulation-chokepoints/ \nhttps://thedisorderofthings.com/author/charmchua/ \nhttps://thedisorderofthings.com/2015/02/07/the-chinese-logistical-sublime-and-its-wasted-remains/ \nhttps://thedisorderofthings.com/2015/01/27/landlessness-and-the-life-of-seamen/ \nHarmony Goldberg\nOn McDonald’s \nhttp://www.salon.com/2014/04/06/how_mcdonalds_gets_away_with_rampant_wage_theft_partner/ \nRas Moshe\nAn interview from Jazz Right Now:  \nhttps://jazzrightnow.com/2014/03/10/interview-ras-moshe/ \nWalter Daum\nExchange in NY Review of Books:  \nhttp://www.nybooks.com/articles/2014/04/03/imperialism-and-world-war-i-exchange/ \nStuart Newman\nall –  \nhttps://legacy.nymc.edu/sanewman/social.htm \nespecially \nhttps://legacy.nymc.edu/sanewman/PDFs/CNS_GM_foods_09.pdf \nhttps://legacy.nymc.edu/sanewman/PDFs/CNS%20Synbio_12.pdf \nDavid Schwartzman \nhttps://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/12/cop-21-paris-climate-change-global-warming-fossil-fuels/ \nhttp://tratarde.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Schwartzman-Saul-CNS-2015.pdf \nhttp://www.redandgreen.org/Documents/Solar_Communism.htm \nAs capitalist relations penetrate every nook and cranny of our planet and the most intimate realms of our lives\, a growing proportion of the world’s population is incorporated into the global proletariat—paid and unpaid workers and our families\, the unemployed and underemployed\, and the growing numbers who will never work. The laboring part of today’s global proletariat is greater than the world’s entire population 40 years ago. Now there are workers from all parts of the globe working for the same set of bosses. \nCapitalists continually seek new avenues to expand their capital and commodify all that exists. The digital revolution has sped all this up\, quickening accumulation which lays the basis for more frequent crises. Capital continues in ever new forms the process of enclosures that began with the forcible removal of the peasantry from the land in medieval Europe. Throughout the global south\, displaced peasants are forced to migrate to cities or internationally\, working in factories or informal economies. Many others are conscripted into comprador armies to protect the extractive industries ravaging their regions. There is also outright robbery: the Panama Papers reveal the extent to which capital has fleeced the global proletariat. After more than three decades of assault on organized labor\, privatization\, austerity and structural adjustment have gutted hard-won social programs. Automation\, digitization and strategic relocation of work\, combined with just-in-time assembly\, make millions “redundant”. At the same time Walmartization\, Uberization\, Amazonification exemplify our marginalization and precarity. \nAs we plan this intensive\, workers and students are in motion throughout France\, from Nuit Debout gatherings to general strikes against austerity.  Greek workers\, hit harder still by austerity\, are reaching out to support the tide of refugees. The contract just won by the Verizon workers in the U.S. after a nation-wide strike represents a major victory. The Sanders campaign has helped normalize the concept of socialism\, but the Left and social movements have not figured out how to articulate a viable socialist alternative and build a corresponding movement. \nOver the four days of this Intensive\, we will study the causes behind these developments\, learn about some obstacles to organizing and the challenges facing workers at work and in their communities\, and consider various left analyses about social realities and the prospects for organizing. We will assess the lessons of workers’ movements globally and historically\, with emphasis on prospects in the US and the global south. Through collaborative study and discussion\, we aim to provide a challenging learning environment so each participant can develop his/her own theoretical and analytic tools to advance our organizing and movement building work in order to broaden opposition to capital locally\, nationally and internationally. \nFRIDAY\, JULY 15 / 10:00 am • Imperialism Today: Super-Exploitation & Marxist Theory • WALTER DAUM • 1:00- 4:00 pm • Class Consciousness\, Class Struggle & Self-Organizing Using Image Theater • presented by The Theater of the Oppressed Laboratory (TOPLAB) • facilitated by JANET GERSON • MARIE-CLAIRE PICHER • 5:30 pm • Public Banking: A Marxist Response to Finance Capital  • DAN KARAN • 7:30 pm • Southern Insurgency: Mass Movements Throughout the Global South • LISA MAYA KNAUER \nSATURDAY\, JULY 16 / 10:00 am • Slackers\, Sabotage\, & Syndicalism: American Labor History & The Refusal of Work • KRISTIN LAWLER  • 1:00  pm • Beyond Bernie: The Crisis of Labor & The Left in the United States • MARK DUDZIC • 3:30 pm • Prometheus in Ruins?: Uses & Abuses of the Hero Who Stole Fire • ANTHONY GALLUZZO • 5:30 pm • Logistics\, Capitalist Circulation\, Chokepoints • CHARMAINE CHUA • 7:30 pm • Devils & Dust: Resisting War in New York\, the Pacific\, & the Middle East • CLAUDE COPELAND • LAUREL MEI-SINGH • YUKO TONOHIRA \nSUNDAY\, JULY 17 / 11:00 am • It’s Not Over: Lessons for Socialists from the October Revolution\, Prague Spring and the Sandinistas • PETE DOLACK • 1:00 pm • Labor in the Global Digital Economy • URSULA HUWS • 3:30 pm • Sexuality\, Gender & Neoliberal Capitalism • KATE DOYLE-GRIFFITHS • LISA MAYA KNAUER  • 5:30 pm • Approaching Science from the Left: Uses & Abuses of Knowledge in the Planetary Crisis • REBECCA BOGER • STUART NEWMAN • DAVE SCHWARTZMAN • moderated by FRED MURPHY \nAs capitalist relations penetrate every nook and cranny of our planet and the most intimate realms of our lives\, a growing proportion of the world’s population is incorporated into the global proletariat—paid and unpaid workers and our families\, the unemployed and underemployed\, and the growing numbers who will never work. The laboring part of today’s global proletariat is greater than the world’s entire population 40 years ago. Now there are workers from all parts of the globe working for the same set of bosses. \nCapitalists continually seek new avenues to expand their capital and commodify all that exists. The digital revolution has sped all this up\, quickening accumulation which lays the basis for more frequent crises. Capital continues in ever new forms the process of enclosures that began with the forcible removal of the peasantry from the land in medieval Europe. Throughout the global south\, displaced peasants are forced to migrate to cities or internationally\, working in factories or informal economies. Many others are conscripted into comprador armies to protect the extractive industries ravaging their regions. There is also outright robbery: the Panama Papers reveal the extent to which capital has fleeced the global proletariat. After more than three decades of assault on organized labor\, privatization\, austerity and structural adjustment have gutted hard-won social programs. Automation\, digitization and strategic relocation of work\, combined with just-in-time assembly\, make millions “redundant”. At the same time Walmartization\, Uberization\, Amazonification exemplify our marginalization and precarity. \nAs we plan this intensive\, workers and students are in motion throughout France\, from Nuit Debout gatherings to general strikes against austerity.  Greek workers\, hit harder still by austerity\, are reaching out to support the tide of refugees. The contract just won by the Verizon workers in the U.S. after a nation-wide strike represents a major victory. The Sanders campaign has helped normalize the concept of socialism\, but the Left and social movements have not figured out how to articulate a viable socialist alternative and build a corresponding movement. \nOver the four days of this Intensive\, we will study the causes behind these developments\, learn about some obstacles to organizing and the challenges facing workers at work and in their communities\, and consider various left analyses about social realities and the prospects for organizing. We will assess the lessons of workers’ movements globally and historically\, with emphasis on prospects in the US and the global south. Through collaborative study and discussion\, we aim to provide a challenging learning environment so each participant can develop his/her own theoretical and analytic tools to advance our organizing and movement building work in order to broaden opposition to capital locally\, nationally and internationally. \nTHURSDAY\, JULY 14 / 10:00 am • Marx and Engels & Classical German Philosophy • RUSSELL DALE • 1:00 pm • Anti-Austerity in France: Live Report from Paris on Bastille Day • DENNIS BROE • 3:30 pm • May ’68 in France: Revisited • MITCH ABIDOR  • 5:30 pm • What Jazz Would Karl Marx Listen to in 2016 • RAS MOSHE • 7:30 pm • Solidarity Without Borders • KAZEMBE BALAGUN • MARK BERGFELD • HARMONY GOLDBERG • MARCUS GRAETSCH • moderated by MARIKA DIAS \nFRIDAY\, JULY 15 / 10:00 am • Imperialism Today: Super-Exploitation & Marxist Theory • WALTER DAUM • 1:00- 4:00 pm • Class Consciousness\, Class Struggle & Self-Organizing Using Image Theater • presented by The Theater of the Oppressed Laboratory (TOPLAB) • facilitated by JANET GERSON • MARIE-CLAIRE PICHER • 5:30 pm • Public Banking: A Marxist Response to Finance Capital  • DAN KARAN • 7:30 pm • Southern Insurgency: Mass Movements Throughout the Global South • MANNY NESS • LISA MAYA KNAUER \nSATURDAY\, JULY 16 / 10:00 am • Slackers\, Sabotage\, & Syndicalism: American Labor History & The Refusal of Work • KRISTIN LAWLER  • 1:00  pm • Beyond Bernie: The Crisis of Labor & The Left in the United States • MARK DUDZIC • 3:30 pm • Prometheus in Ruins?: Uses & Abuses of the Hero Who Stole Fire • ANTHONY GALLUZZO • 5:30 pm • Logistics\, Capitalist Circulation\, Chokepoints • CHARMAINE CHUA • 7:30 pm • Devils & Dust: Resisting War in New York\, the Pacific\, & the Middle East • CLAUDE COPELAND • LAUREL MEI-SINGH • YUKO TONOHIRA \nSUNDAY\, JULY 17 / 11:00 am • It’s Not Over: Lessons for Socialists from the October Revolution\, Prague Spring and the Sandinistas • PETE DOLACK • 1:00 pm • Labor in the Global Digital Economy • URSULA HUWS • 3:30 pm • Sexuality\, Gender & Neoliberal Capitalism • KATE DOYLE-GRIFFITHS • LISA MAYA KNAUER  • 5:30 pm • Approaching Science from the Left: Uses & Abuses of Knowledge in the Planetary Crisis • REBECCA BOGER • STUART NEWMAN • DAVE SCHWARTZMAN • moderated by FRED MURPHY
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/marxist-summer-intensive-july-14-17/
LOCATION:United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/FistDebout.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Unnamed Organizer":MAILTO: info@marxedproject.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20150610T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20150610T213000
DTSTAMP:20260616T104056
CREATED:20150426T193033Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150426T193033Z
UID:10003764-1433964600-1433971800@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Marxism and the Oppression of Women
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URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/marxism-and-the-oppression-of-women/2015-06-10/
LOCATION:United States
CATEGORIES:Multi-session Classes
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20150517T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20150517T160000
DTSTAMP:20260616T104056
CREATED:20150426T162521Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150426T180338Z
UID:10003749-1431860400-1431878400@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Between The Wage and The Commons
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URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/between-the-wage-and-the-commons/
LOCATION:United States
CATEGORIES:Classes/Events,Seminars and Talks
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20141012T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20141012T170000
DTSTAMP:20260616T104056
CREATED:20141025T211917Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20141025T211917Z
UID:10003687-1413106200-1413133200@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:The Commons: An All-Day Seminar with Siliva Federici
DESCRIPTION:While evoking a pre-capitalist past\, the idea of the “common(s)” is embraced today by feminists\, anarchists\, greens\, Marxists/socialists as the formative principle of a non-capitalist society. \nThe workshop will examine : \n\nA. What the concept of “the common” has represented historically\, especially in the Marxist/socialist as well as the anarchist and feminist traditions and the social consequences of the capitalist process of enclosure\nB. What has prompted its recent revival in militant circles\, beginning with the ‘new enclosures’ driven by theglobalization process\nC. What it signifies practically and theoretically in the politics of contemporary social movements and the main issues it raises and has raised (the question of scale\, the threat of institutional co-optation\, the relation between commons-building and other struggles)\nD. Most important\, we will discuss how the politics of the commons is being realized today and the different forms of commons that are being constructed with special emphasis on “reproductive commons” and their contribution to the construction of communities of resistance.\nSilvia Federici is a feminist activist\, writer\, and a teacher. In 1972 she was one of the co-founders of the International Feminist Collective\, the organization that launched the international campaign for Wages For Housework. From 1987 to 2005 she taught international studies\, women studies\, and political philosophy courses at Hofstra University in Hempstead\, NY. All through these years she has written books and essays on philosophy and feminist theory\, women’s history\, education and culture\, and more recently the worldwide struggle against capitalist globalization and for a feminist reconstruction of the commons. \nSuggested donation: $35 to $55\nNo one turned away for inability to pay
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/the-commons-an-all-day-seminar-with-siliva-federici/
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