Reading Antonio Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks
Online: Zoom link will be provided to registered participantsBlood and Fire: The Violent Origins of Capitalism
Online: Zoom link will be provided to registered participantsWeek of Events
Reading Antonio Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks
Reading Antonio Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks
We continue to study selected passages from Antonio Gramsci’s Prison Notebooks. We delve into key themes and concepts related to civil society and state: politics and the arts, racism, class and gender, religion, linguistics, and other methods of analysis, critical theory, mass media, and cinema, hegemony, and subaltern studies, as well as the role of intellectuals and activists in discovering new methods and languages to be transformative.
Blood and Fire: The Violent Origins of Capitalism
Blood and Fire: The Violent Origins of Capitalism
Join the MEP's Capital Study Group in a four-week study of the concluding section of volume I of Marx's Capital, which discloses the widespread violence and dispossession - in both Europe and colonized areas - that accompanied the emergence of capitalism.
Oppression and Resistance in New Chinese and Chinese-American Science Fiction
Oppression and Resistance in New Chinese and Chinese-American Science Fiction
Before Theodore W. Allen turned to his magnum opus, The Invention of the White Race, he drafted an essay "The Kernel and Meaning: A Contribution to a Proletarian Critique of U.S. Historiography." In it, he assessed how the industrial bourgeoisie successfully overturned plantation capital's rule while assuring its own ascendancy over the proletariat. Allen reviewed six commonly held explanations as to why, despite favorable objective conditions, the U.S. left and workers movements failed to establish socialism or even a permanent working-class party. Participants in this group will read and discuss the original, 160-page typescript of Allen's unpublished essay.