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DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170427T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170427T213000
DTSTAMP:20170224T143315Z
CREATED:20170224T070519Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170224T143315Z
UID:10006156-1493321400-1493328600@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:The Explosion of Deferred Dreams
DESCRIPTION:The Explosion of Deferred Dreams: Musical Renaissance and Social Revolution in San Francisco\, 1965–1975\nMat Callahan \nAs the fiftieth anniversary of the Summer of Love floods the media with debates and celebrations of music\, political movements\, “flower power\,” “acid rock\,” and “hippies”; The Explosion of Deferred Dreams offers a critical re-examination of the interwoven political and musical happenings in San Francisco in the Sixties. Author\, musician\, and native San Franciscan Mat Callahan explores the dynamic links between the Black Panthers and Sly and the Family Stone\, the United Farm Workers and Santana\, the Indian Occupation of Alcatraz and the San Francisco Mime Troupe\, and the New Left and the counterculture. \nCallahan’s meticulous\, impassioned arguments both expose and reframe the political and social context for the San Francisco Sound and the vibrant subcultural uprisings with which it is associated. Using dozens of original interviews\, primary sources\, and personal experiences\, the author shows how the intense interplay of artistic and political movements put San Francisco\, briefly\, in the forefront of a worldwide revolutionary upsurge. \nA must-read for any musician\, historian\, or person who “was there” (or longed to have been)\, The Explosion of Deferred Dreams is substantive and provocative\, inviting us to reinvigorate our historical sense-making of an era that assumes a mythic role in the contemporary American zeitgeist. \n“All too often\, people talk about the ’60s without mentioning our music and the fun we had trying to smash the state and create a culture based upon love. Mat Callahan’s book is a necessary corrective.” —George Katsiaficas\, author of The Imagination of the New Left: A Global Analysis of 1968 \nMat Callahan is a musician and author originally from San Francisco\, where he founded Komotion International. He is the author of three books\, Sex\, Death & the Angry Young Man\, Testimony\, and The Trouble with Music as well as the editor of Songs of Freedom: The James Connolly Songbook. He currently resides in Bern\, Switzerland.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/the-explosion-of-deferred-dreams/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170425T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170425T193000
DTSTAMP:20170424T031256Z
CREATED:20170319T023758Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170424T031256Z
UID:10006161-1493143200-1493148600@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Sartre’s Search For A Method
DESCRIPTION:Five More Sessions with Dan Karan\nApril 25-May23\nA series within the Emergence of A New Left Programming \nJohn Paul Sartre was one of the most important radical intellectuals of the 20th century yet he is largely forgotten or ignored by most Marxists and others on “the left.” This\, despite the fact that as a philosopher\, playwright\, novelist\, essayist and political activist Sartre’s primary concerns surrounded questions of individual freedom\, choice and action (in his early career) and the relationship between individual freedom and collective good (in his later career) and developing a method for understanding history\, the structure of class struggle and the fate of mass movements and popular revolt. Ronald Hayman\, one of Sartre’s biographers\, summarizes Sartre’s intellectual project as follows: \n“As a Marxist he wanted to believe that dialectical materialism offered a complete interpretation of history – that all the contradictions\, conflicts\, heterogeneities\, anomalies could be subsumed in a single totalization. Sartre is simultaneously concerned to provide Marxism with an adequate theory of knowledge\, both Marx and Lenin had worked without one – and to combat the Heideggarian existentialism which consistently makes Being its point of departure. Sartre insists that history is the history of human initiatives. What emerges as the crucial problem is how to map the jungle of obscure connections between historical movements and individual actions.”  \nThis class will focus on Sartre’s 1957 text\, Search For A Method\, which reflects his growth from existentialist philosopher concerned with individual freedom to an anti-authoritarian existential Marxist who believed that individual freedom can only come about via one’s commitment to the collective good. Search for a Method consists of three major parts: The first part discusses Marxist and existentialist views of the world; the second\, how the individual relates to structures; and\, the third develops a methodology for understanding the individual\, history and structures. \nDan Karan has been studying Marxism for 40 years and was a student of John Gerassi\, Sartre’s official biographer.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/sartres-search-for-a-method/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170410T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170410T213000
DTSTAMP:20170303T120331Z
CREATED:20170111T155830Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170303T120331Z
UID:10003763-1491852600-1491859800@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Small is Necessary: Shared Housing on a Shared Planet
DESCRIPTION:A presentation and discussion with activist-scholar Anitra Nelson\, whose forthcoming book from Pluto Press argues for smaller homes with shared spaces and facilities \nHouses and apartments in countries like Australia and the US grew larger in the 20th century as household sizes shrank. Not only does this make housing less environmentally sustainable but contributes to the housing affordability crisis. The US mortgage fiasco triggered the Global Financial Crisis and many countries have experienced fluctuating or skyrocketing house prices since. Meanwhile\, the withdrawal of state support for social and public housing means private ownership or rental seem like the only options for most people. \nThe solutions analyzed are not just smaller dwellings in compact settlements but also shared spaces and facilities. The presentation will look at a range of practical options from co-living in a household to cohousing and ecovillages\, weighing up the pros and cons of the tiny house movement and assessing the potential and limits of radical squats along the way. Anitra considers collaborative housing/living futures managed by quite different drivers: governments\, market developers and sharing economy initiatives\, and grassroots communities. Anitra has had ten years’ experience living in two distinctive Australian housing collectives but her forthcoming book is research-based\, especially drawing on ecological footprint studies. \nAnitra Nelson is an activist-scholar whose research interests focus on housing and community-based sustainability\, environmental justice and non-monetary futures. Associate Professor at the Centre for Urban Research\, RMIT University (Melbourne\, Australia)\, in 2016–2017 she was a Carson Fellow at the Rachel Carson Centre for Environment and Society at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich completing Small is Necessary: Shared Living on a Shared Planet (forthcoming). She co-edited Planning After Petroleum: Preparing Cities for the Age Beyond Oil (2016)\, Sustainability Citizenship in Cities: Theory and Practice (2016) and Life Without Money: Building Fair and Sustainable Economies (2011).
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/small-is-necessary-shared-housing-on-a-shared-planet/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/SmallNecessary_BklynSite.jpg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170405T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170405T213000
DTSTAMP:20170314T225303Z
CREATED:20170314T225303Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170314T225303Z
UID:10006157-1491420600-1491427800@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:The Three Worlds of Social Democracy
DESCRIPTION:A book-launch and discussion with Ingo Schmidt (editor) and Mariano Féliz (contributor) \nCapitalists’ permanent pressure on the working and living conditions of the popular classes guarantees an equally permanent demand for social protections. Curiously enough\, around the same time capitalists turned from class compromise to an all-out offensive against Western European welfare states\, until then the showcase of social democratic success\, popular classes in a number of post-colonial and post-communist countries turned to social democracy. Though the 1990s are usually seen as nothing but an age of neoliberal globalization\, it is more accurate to say that the same decade also saw the globalization of social democracy. With Third Worldism in retreat under the pressure of the international debt crises and counterinsurgency measures and Soviet communism finally collapsing after an extended period of stagnation\, social democracy was the last remaining project of the 20th century left. \nThe ANC in South Africa\, the Workers Party in Brazil\, Communists in India and the former ruling parties in Eastern Europe eventually turned onto the social democratic road. But they did that at a time when social democracy in Western Europe was relabeled as a Third Way somewhere between the redistributive welfare state of the past and the present of unfettered global competition. However\, the globalization of this Third Way turned out to be a dead-end. Wherever parties were elected on a moderately social democratic platform\, soon after taking office the same parties would tell their voters that it was belt-tightening time. Ensuing anger\, disappointment and frustrations opened the way for left- and right-wing alternatives to social democracy but also a quest for social democracy before the Third Way. \nThe Three Worlds of Social Democracy presents the experiences of parties and governments of social democracy from Western and Eastern Europe\, Latin America\, India\, and South Africa. The book offers cutting-edge case studies to present a truly global exploration of the methods\, meanings\, and limits of social democracy. It also explores the potential for left alternatives to social democracy and the dangers of surging right-wing populism.  \nMariano Féliz is an economist at the Instituto de Investigaciones en Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales and the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cient.ficas y Técnicas\, Universidad Nacional de La Plata\, Argentina. \nIngo Schmidt is the coordinator of the Labour Studies Programme at Athabasca University\, Canada.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/the-three-worlds-of-social-democracy/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
CATEGORIES:Capital Studies,Marxist Method,Socialism
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170404T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170404T213000
DTSTAMP:20170403T133053Z
CREATED:20170315T030257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170403T133053Z
UID:10006159-1491334200-1491341400@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Emergence of a New Left: The Black Panther Party (extended to April 11)
DESCRIPTION:Noble Bratton will conduct a 3-week reading and discussion of the essential history of the Black Panther Party\, Black Against Empire. Please read the first two sections for March 21.\nNoble Bratton is a graduate of Cornell University and is on the editorial board of Working USA/Labor and Society. He taught a class on the US Presidency at The Brecht Forum. He has participated with the Leo Downes Harlem Y Study Group. He is also a former member of District Council 65 of the UAW\, UNITE Local 169.\nReadings for the next three weeks will include chapters from Black Against Empire by Joshua Bloom and Waldo Martin. \nA special price of $15 for April 4 and 11
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/emergence-of-a-new-left-the-black-panther-party/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/PanthersGatherwCommunitySite.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170327T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170327T213000
DTSTAMP:20170303T120244Z
CREATED:20170128T074846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170303T120244Z
UID:10006134-1490643000-1490650200@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:The Emancipation of Labor
DESCRIPTION:The Civil War and the Making of the American Working Class\nA talk and discussion with author Mark Lause \nMark A. Lause will provide an overview of his widely acclaimed book Free Labor: The Civil War and the Making of the American Working Class (2016) and discuss his current project on the origins of American socialism\, taking up little-known aspects of the emergence of a class-struggle perspective on the American left. He will consider why those dimensions have thus far received little attention from historians and socialists. Northern workers “took up arms because they understood the importance of the conflict in shaping the future value of ‘free labor\,’” and a “rolling strike of the slaves” in the South became “the great incontrovertible and irreversible fact of the war”. \nMark A. Lause is a professor of history at the University of Cincinnati who focuses on U.S. labor movements in the nineteenth century. A lifelong radical\, his Free Labor: The Civil War and the Making of the American Working Class (2016) is the most recent in a series of works on the Civil War era. Others include studies of land reform\, spiritualism\, secret societies\, and bohemianism\, and Race & Radicalism in the Union Army\, on the tri-racial experience of the Federal Army of the Frontier. A forthcoming book will address The Great Cowboy Strike and western labor struggles in the 1880s. His reviews and essays on contemporary politics have appeared in Against the Current\, Counterpunch\, Jacobin\, and The North Star\, where he serves on the editorial board.  A veteran of SDS and the radicalization of the 1960s\, Lause has joined various socialist organizations over the last half century – most expelled him and all disappointed him. Long interested in environmental issues\, he has been identified with the Green Party since the 1990s and served on the state committee of the Ohio party.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/the-emancipation-of-labor/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Lause_ForSite.jpg
GEO:40.6869154;-73.9855868
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Brooklyn Commons 388 Atlantic Avenue Brooklyn;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=388 Atlantic Avenue:geo:-73.9855868,40.6869154
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170311T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170311T170000
DTSTAMP:20170303T120457Z
CREATED:20170123T050042Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170303T120457Z
UID:10006132-1489244400-1489251600@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:The Life and Thought of Louis-Auguste Blanqui
DESCRIPTION:A talk and discussion with Doug “Enaa” Greene \nIn the revolutionary tradition\, the name of the nineteenth-century French communist Louis-Auguste Blanqui (1805-1881) is remembered either with derision or—at best—as a noble failure. Yet during his lifetime\, Blanqui was a towering figure of revolutionary courage and commitment as he organized nearly a half-dozen failed revolutionary conspiracies and spent half of his life in jail. His first street fight was in 1827. Blanqui inspired an uprising in 1839 by the League of the Just\, a forerunner of the Communist League of which Marx was a member in Paris. He was imprisoned for his role in the revolutionary wave of activity in 1848. During the Commune of 1871\, his ability to inspire was felt to be so strong that Thiers would not exchange him for the captured archbishop of Paris. He is known well for his phrase that we have inherited as “No Gods\, No Masters”. Blanqui’s perspective was diametrically opposed to the reformers and utopians who abhorred revolution. Rather\, he thought earnestly and without illusions about what it would take to actually make a revolution. In a time like today\, when the old formulas of following the lesser evil\, social democracy\, and other such schemes are falling short\, it is worthwhile to take a fresh look at Blanqui. \nDoug “Enaa” Greene is a Marxist writer and historian living in the greater Boston area. He is the author of Specters of Communism: Blanqui and Marx\, forthcoming from Haymarket Books.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/the-life-and-thought-of-louis-auguste-blanqui/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Blanqui_ForSite.jpg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170306T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170306T213000
DTSTAMP:20170303T120152Z
CREATED:20170211T053624Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170303T120152Z
UID:10006154-1488828600-1488835800@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Popular Struggles in South Africa
DESCRIPTION:Popular Struggles in South Africa:\nUrban Revolt: State Power and the Rise of People’s Movements in the Global South and The Spirit of Marikana: The Rise of Insurgent Trade Unionism in South Africa \nA report on current and future liberation movements in South Africa with\nTrevor Ngwane\, Luke Sinwell and Manny Ness \nOn 16th August 2012\, thirty-four black mineworkers were gunned down by the police under the auspices of South Africa’s African National Congress (ANC) in what has become known as the Marikana massacre. Luke Sinwell’s The Spirit of Marikana tells the story of the uncelebrated leaders at the world’s three largest platinum mining companies who survived the barrage of state violence\, intimidation\, torture and murder which was being perpetrated during this tumultuous period. What began as a discussion about wage increases between two workers in the changing rooms at one mine became a rallying cry for economic freedom and basic dignity. This gripping ethnographic account is the first comprehensive study of this movement\, revealing how seemingly ordinary people became heroic figures who transformed their workplace and their country. \nThe urban poor and working class now make up the majority of the world’s population and this segment is growing dramatically as the global population expands to 10 billion by mid-century. Much of the population growth results from the displacement of rural peasants to the urban cores\, resulting in the vast expansion of mega-cities with 10 to 20 million people in the global South. The proliferation of informal settlements and slums particularly in the global south have created the conditions in which urban areas have become the principal sites of social upheaval as people seek to improve their living conditions. Drawing from case studies in Africa\, Latin America\, and Asia\, the various chapters in Urban Revolt: State Power and the Rise of People’s Movements in the Global South map and analyze the ways in which the majority of the world exists and struggles in the contemporary urban context. \nTrevor Ngwane and Luke Sinwell will discuss the current situation in South Africa where trade union militancy has spread more broadly in the five years since Marikana\, the anti-austerity student movement remains strong at most universities and other schools\, and socialist parties are experiencing growth and are at times uniting to fight the neoliberalism of the post-apartheid state. \nMgcineni ‘Mambush’ Noki (imagined in the wall painting wearing a green blanket) was one of the 34 mineworkers killed by the South African police on August 2016 while on strike demanding a ‘living wage’ in the most potent episode of state violence against civilians in the post-apartheid period. Mambush and the others live on as the insurgency grows broader and deeper in South African society and beyond. \nThrough detailed case studies\, Urban Revolt unravels the potential and limitations of urban social movements on an international level. \n“A superb addition to the literature on the contemporary global crisis and its micro manifestations.” —Patrick Bond\, BRICS: An Anticapitalist Critique \nThe urban poor and working class now make up the majority of the world’s population. Much of the population growth results from the displacement of rural peasants to mega-cities. The proliferation of informal settlements and slums\, particularly in the Global South\, have created conditions ripe for social upheaval as people seek to improve their living conditions and win basic human rights. Drawing from case studies in Africa\, Latin America\, and Asia\, the chapters in this book map and analyze the ways in which the majority of the world exists and struggles in the contemporary urban context.\n“What emerges from this collection is a complex picture of resistance\, which nevertheless provides nuanced hope for a universalist project of social transformation…. The result is often a refreshing and accessible journey into urban revolts that the reader may have less familiarity.”\n—Leo Zeilig\, African Struggles Today: Social Movements Since Independence \n“Capitalism itself is in crisis so it means\, as Marx said\, the CEOs of the world\, government leaders\, have now become personifications of capital. They no longer have any control. They speak for capital. They are just meant to trample on our rights willy nilly. They did that in Greece until a left party took over and then now they are turning the screws on that left party. It’s harder in countries such as the USA where socialism is a swear word as it is in Eastern Europe.”\n—Trevor Ngwane\, Counterfire\, 2015 \n“Fanon somewhere quotes Marx on how the social revolution “cannot draw its poetry from the past\, but only from the future.” The EFF\, the student movement and the working class movement has to find a way forward without going back to nationalism as an ideology of struggle. The struggle against imperialism has to break out of the discourse of colonialism without denying this history and its legacy…at its heart will be proletarian internationalism rather than bourgeois nationalism.”  —Trevor Ngwane\, 2016 \nTrevor Ngwane is a scholar-activist who is active in the Socialist Group and the United Front\, organizations that seek a pro–working class pro-poor future for South Africa and the world. His PhD thesis recently awarded by the University of Johannesburg is titled “Amakomiti as democracy on the margins: Popular committees in South Africa’s informal settlements.” \nLuke Sinwell is a senior researcher with the South African Research Chair in Social Change\, University of Johannesburg. He has published widely on social movements and popular protest. His latest book is an ethnography called\, The Spirit of Marikana: The Rise of Insurgent Trade Unionism in South Africa (Pluto Press\, 2016). \nImmanuel Ness is a professor of political science at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. He has authored and edited of many books including: Southern Insurgency: The Coming of the Global Working Class (Pluto Press\, 2015) and Ours to Master and to Own: Worker Control from the Commune to the Present (Haymarket Books\, 2011). Ness is co-editor of the third world political economy quarterly\, Journal of Labor and Society. \nCopies of Urban Revolt\, The Spirit of Marikana and Southern Insurgency will be available for purchase.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/insurgent-south-africa-the-spirit-of-marikana/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/LongMural_MarikanaSite.jpg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20170228T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20170228T213000
DTSTAMP:20170222T054604Z
CREATED:20170220T171117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170222T054604Z
UID:10006155-1488310200-1488317400@marxedproject.org
SUMMARY:Emergence of a New Left: Civil Rights from Reform to Revolution
DESCRIPTION:We begin with Malcolm\nNoble Bratton\nTwo more sessions prior to One-Dimensional Man: February 28 and March 7 \nNoble Bratton will conduct a 3-week history of the Civil Rights movement with CORE\, SNCC and analyzing the growing militancy in African-American life that led to the revolutionary politics of The Black Panther Party as the 60s developed.\nNoble Bratton is a graduate of Cornell University and is on the editorial board of Working USA/Labor and Society. He taught a class on the US Presidency at The Brecht Forum. He has participated with the Leo Downes Harlem Y Study Group. He is also a former member of District Council 65 of the UAW\, UNITE Local 169.\nReadings for the next two weeks will include chapters from Manning Marable’s Race\, Reform and Rebellion.
URL:https://marxedproject.org/event/emergence-of-a-new-left-civil-rights-from-reform-to-revolution/
LOCATION:Brooklyn Commons\, 388 Atlantic Avenue\, Brooklyn
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://marxedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/CivRightsFeb21_Site.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Beginnings of a New Left":MAILTO:revsgroup@gmail.com
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