Next week, we’ll kick off a four week exploration of anarchist struggles in the Spanish Civil War with Lawrence Jarach facilitating our discussions. For our first session, please read the first two chapters of Gabriele Ranzato’s The Spanish Civil War (pp. 8-49) and watch the first two episodes of the Granada documentary of the same name. Hope to see you there!
Author Archives: bastard
Reading for 9/5
Tuesday we’ll watch a lecture Giorgio Agamben delivered at the European Graduate School in 2011. “The Archeology of Commandment” will be up for discussion.
Reading for 8/29
Late post this week. We’ll look at part of Elias Canetti’s Crowds and Power; to wit, the section “The Command” on pp. 303-333.
Reading for 8/22
Next week, we’re looking at Elisabeth Lenk’s Introduction to Fourier’s Theory of the Four Movements and the General Destinies (pp. 197-224). Thanks to Lee for the scan.
Reading for 8/15
We’ll continue our Fourierist thread next week with the first part of Lee’s translation of Eduardo Subirats’ Utopia and Subversion – part 1, “Fourier or The World as Voluptuousness”. Archive has been giving me issues this week so if you have issues downloading, email birdsoffire [at] riseup [dot] net and I’ll bounce it to you.
Reading for 8/8
Finishing up Fourier’s The World War of Small Pastries on Tuesday: pp. (52-end). See you then.
Reading for 8/1
Next week we’re reading The World War of Small Pastries by Charles Fourier. We’ll discuss pp. 5-52, stopping at “Announcement of the Arrival of the Crusaders”.
Reading for 7/25
I’m assembling an essay on queer death, which has as one of its illuminating points Georges Bataille’s notion of “the community of those who have no community” — the impossibility of presence except as revealed through the death’s intimacy. So I look forward to hearing your thoughts on a remarkable though ephemeral text which treats this incommunicable remainder: Maurice Blanchot’s The Unavowable Community. Let’s consider its first section, “The Negative Community” (pp. 1-26) on Tuesday. Thanks in advance for your indulgence.
Reading for 7/18
We will not be meeting at our usual time and place next Tuesday so that we can attend a book release and presentation being given on Uruguayan anarchism during the Cold War. If you’d like to meet up, we’ll be at Tamarack (1501 Harrison St in downtown Oakland) at 6pm. The book in question is Anarchist Popular Power – Dissident Labor and Armed Struggle in Uruguay, 1956-76 by Troy Andreas Araiza Kokinis. It’s not terribly long, though one supposes that the presentation will presuppose little to no knowledge of the subject. So read whatever parts you feel drawn to and we’ll all have a bit of a field trip together. Any discussion of the FAU is compelled to offer commentary on the doctrinaire quasi-Leninist premises of platformism and especifismo (or specifism) so you may also wish to do a bit of reading on those tendencies within anarchism if you’re unfamiliar with them. Until then!
Reading for 7/11
This week, a piece published last year by Ill Will Editions that I found quite striking: Ulysse Carrière’s “Vandalizing the Subject”. Also, a heads up that on July 18th we are considering meeting at 6pm at Tamarack to hear a talk on anarchism in Uruguay. I will confirm whether that is indeed happening after we meet this week. See you Tuesday.