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What do Social Movements Accomplish? And How?

On November 15, Occupy Wall Street was evicted by the police from Zucotti Park.  What's next?  (Photo: David Shankbone/Creative Commons)

A recent panel discussing what is next for Occupy Wall Street was diverse in ethnicity and age of the panelists, but narrow in political perspective. The shared belief that legislative reforms would constitute victory for the movement was disappointing. Sponsored by the journals Jacobin and Dissent, the stated purpose of the panel was to reflect [...]

December 9th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

New Books Examine the Trajectory of Labor in the United States in the Seventies

pivotal decade

Beyond nostalgia for polyester leisure suits, disco and “Charlie’s Angels,” the ’70s are emerging as a subject of serious historical investigation. In paticular, a number of recent works have called attention to the troubles of the labor movement in that decade. Economic conditions worsened as the U.S. faced competition from European and Japanese industry and rising [...]

December 7th, 2011 | Posted in Book Industry News,News Blog | Read More »

Pick of the Day: “The Barbarian Nurseries” by Hector Tobar

newbarbarians

“The Barbarian Nurseries” is the second novel of Hector Tobar; he is author of “Translation Nation” and, according to his website, he is ”a novelist, a journalist, the son of Guatemalan immigrants and a proud native of the city of Los Angeles.” This tale of racial and class divisions within one Southern Californian household sounds promising. Publishers Weekly [...]

December 6th, 2011 | Posted in Book Industry News,News Blog | Read More »

Pick of the Day: “Midnight Rising” by Tony Horowitz

newmidnightrising

Tony Horowitz, author of numerous books including “Confederates in the Attic,” turns to a historical subject in his new book, “Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid That Sparked the Civil War.” The focus on an individual fighting for social change, rather than either the founding fathers or obscure individuals, is fairly unusual in mainstream [...]

December 5th, 2011 | Posted in Book Industry News,News Blog | Read More »

Occupy Wall Street is like Twitter

ifonlywaronpoverty...

In the aftermath of the rebellions of the sixties, efforts to produce enduring left structures proved frustrating. Reformist efforts tended to disappear into the bowels of the Democratic Party or similar parties elsewhere. Revolutionary groups quickly turned into sectarian cults. Numerous organizations and individuals continued to struggle, often around single issues, but the creation of [...]

November 18th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

The Upside to Kim Kardashian’s Divorce

realitybites

Jennifer L. Pozner, author of “Reality Bites Back: The Troubling Truth About Guilty Pleasure TV,” has a striking perspective on the much publicized divorce of Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries. In a piece for ”The Daily Beast,” she  argues that it’s a good thing: “The disconnect between blissful on-air bride and off-screen divorcée offers viewers proof, [...]

November 10th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

Social Democratic Anarchists and Communist Anarchists and the Occupy Movement

Belief that the police are part of the working class is characteristic of the "Social Democratic Anarchists" (photo: Thomas Good/NLN, Creative Commons)

A  division exists within the leaderless communities at the heart of the Occupy protests. I would describe this as a split between Social Democratic Anarchists and Communist Anarchists. I use these two terms provocatively, knowing that most of those I refer to would not describe themselves as either. Neither the terms Social Democrat or Communist [...]

October 23rd, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

The Working Class and Occupy Wall Street

nextupsurge

Union membership doesn’t increase much due to patient organizing work, as sociologist Dan Clawson explained in  “The Next Upsurge : Labor and the New Social Movements”, published in 2003.  Instead, it shoots up during upsurges of strike activity, and then levels off. According to Clawson, in the 1980s and ’90s, unions had slowly developed new [...]

October 10th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

Rewriting Occupy Wall Street’s First “Official” Statement

occupy-wallstreet

Occupy Wall Street’s first “official” statement (the quotation marks are theirs) needs work. After about two paragraphs of generic boilerplate (“the future of the human race requires the cooperation of its members”) we arrive at the key sentiment: “We come to you at a time when corporations, which place profit over people, self-interest over justice, [...]

October 3rd, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

I Heart #OccupyWallStreet

Anonymous at Occupy Wall Street Photo: David Shankbone/Creative Commons

At first, I didn’t love Occupy Wall Street, the protest/encampment in New York City’s financial district, to be honest. When I went by in the afternoon on Sept. 17, the first day, it struck me as too counter-cultural, too white, too homogenous, too small and too unfocused. People demonstrating their support for libertarian presidential candidate Ron [...]

September 29th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

Is the Left Dead?

americandreamers

Reviewing historian Michael Kazin’s “American Dreamers: How the Left Changed a Nation” in The New York Times, Yale history professor Beverly Gage declares “the American left is dead.”  She cites as evidence the fact that the Tea Party has been a more visible opposition force since the financial crisis than anything from the left, and [...]

September 28th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

Dubious Books, Fall 2011 Preview Edition

Why would anyone regard a book like this as "notable", when there are two new dog biographies coming out soon?

The U.S. is in a deep economic crisis, with the job market looking more stagnant than ever. The notion that the U.S. can be at peace has seemingly become utopian. Vast numbers of citizens distrust their government, and the  prospect of a collapse is widely discussed. So how are our most distinguished writers and publishing [...]

September 15th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

Secrets from Michael Moore’s New Book

herecomestrouble

Filmmaker Michael Moore’s memoir, “Here Comes Trouble: Stories from My Life” was released on Tuesday, September 13.  The Washington Post has a sneak peak for those considering whether to pick it up. Among the highlights:  Moore blames baby formula for a lot; a young, lost Moore was saved by California Senator Robert F. Kennedy on [...]

September 14th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

Pick of the Day: “Debt:The First 5,000 Years” by David Graeber

debt

David Graeber, a professor at Goldsmiths, University of London, is best known for his work on anarchism, which blends personal experience with anthropological theory. Even as his fame as a professor has grown, he remains a committed political activist. In, “Debt: The First 5,000 Years”, he adapts a very long term perspective to understand the [...]

September 13th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

Pick of the Day: “Lockdown High” by Annette Fuentes

lockdown

In the wake of the shootings at Columbine, “Lockdown High: When the Schoolhouse Becomes a Jailhouse” exposes the climate of paranoia and subsequent measures of control that have been imposed in high schools across the United States. From the product description on Amazon: Investigative reporter Annette Fuentes visits schools across America and finds metal detectors [...]

September 13th, 2011 | Posted in News Blog | Read More »

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