Blog

Kony 2012: Inaudible Children

By Tavia Nyong'o on March 12, 2012
Can the subaltern speak? No, but she can certainly sob, with tears of raking loss and, a few rapid film cuts later, tears of heartwarming gratitude. I learned that much watching Kony 2012 this morning, even if, like most people from the region, I learned little else by way of information or context.>>

Revolutionary Expertise?

By Hannah Chadeayne Appel on February 16, 2012
As the New York Occupy movement goes on, it also spreads out. 16 Beaver, Charlotte's place, and the Atrium of 60 Wall Street (now home to General Assemblies), remain nodes in the occupied downtown real estate network, but the overwhelming...>>

Why the Question of Palestine is a Feminist Concern

By Neferti X. M. Tadiar on February 15, 2012
I was recently part of a fact-finding delegation to Palestine organized by the US Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel. The delegation was composed of concerned academics and scholars based in the U.S., including myself. During our weeklong investigative trip, we were witness to multiple and varied testimonies to and clear evidence of the daily acts of violence, harassment and humiliation that Palestinians are subjected to, both massive and intimate. Individuals from several families living in Eastern Jerusalem told us their personal stories of being physically thrown out of their homes in the middle of the night, their houses pillaged and taken over by settlers (many of whom were only recently residents of the U.S.), their belongings strewn onto the streets only to be looted by morning, their children targeted to bear recurring nightmares of the punishing character of their eviction (being made to see, for example, the displayed burning of their dolls alongside that of their beds).>>

Issue 108: Fall 2011

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The Skim

Scholars and writers urge reform of anti-dissent law in Thailand.
"Law for the People" vs. Monarchic "Land of Smiles."
Occupy the Academy panel at Columbia to consider politics of open access, February 28th, noon.
Issue 4 of Media Fields is out, with lots of essays on scale

The other side of freedom
Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal invests $300 million in Twitter, though at the time of this announcement "it wasn't clear how much of Twitter the prince will control."
"There is no reason to believe that these abrogations of popular sovereignty cannot be sustained for a very long time with the tactical application of force." Africa? Latin America? No, Western Europe and the U.S..
When will the "meme" meme die?
There is nothing wrong with higher education in Greece that a little less democracy couldn't solve, according to an international committee that included the chancellors of University of California-Davis and New York University.
When did "health and safety" become a euphemism for "shock and awe"?
Great aerial footage of #OWS action in solidarity with #OccupyOakland 
Brown University faculty issues statement of support for Occupy Providence
What Days of Rage looked like around the world.
Columbia University faculty in support of #OccupyWallStreet
What do you do when your job makes your poorer?
"Mic check? MIC CHECK!"

Events

FORCE: The UC Policy

By Social Text Collective on March 11, 2012 0 Comments
Opening Reception, 3/14, 3-6pm - Panel discussion on the militarization of the campus police, 3/14, 4:30-5:30pm - Exhibition opens 3/12 through 3/23/2012

ST Members Return from Delegation to Palestine

By Social Text Collective on February 21, 2012 2 Comments
Five faculty from U.S. universities who recently completed a week-long visit to Occupied Palestine and Israel are calling on academic colleagues everywhere to support the United States Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (USACBI).

Reviews

A History of Debt

By Maryam Monalisa Gharavi on October 31, 2011 1 Comment

David Graeber's Debt: The First 5,000 Years is an outsize exposition of social, historical, and institutional constructions of value and the high political stakes they have for human societies. It spans an impressive gamut of practices ranging from religious beliefs about primordial obligation, 19th-century Positivist notions of "social debt," and the bond between states and the markets that parasitically rely on each other to survive.

In his Philosophy of Money, Georg Simmel wrote, "just as a poem is not simply a fact of literary history, but also an aesthetic, a philological and a biographical fact - so the fact that two people exchange their products is by no means simply an economic fact" (52-53). People invest economic objects with a calculable value as if it were an inherent quality, though Simmel left the question of what value is or means as ultimately "unanswerable." Marx took a similar approach, notwithstanding his remarks on the element of unaccountability in money as an expression of frayed social relations.

Graeber's Debt offers a synthesis of transnational social practices concerned with value, exchange, and money but moves in an exciting novel and opposite direction. He situates debt as the quantification of promise and obligation and the threat of violence behind that calculation (in contrast to the complexities of obligation in self-cooperating civilizations, in what is usually referred to as mutual aid). Read more >>

Periscope

critical intelligence on current events
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Bird on Fire

Bird on Fire offers many crucial lessons for environmental and climate justice activists. To draw out some of those lessons, Social Text has assembled a group of prominent activist intellectuals to comment on Ross’s important book, as well as an excerpt from the book and a video of a talk that Ross gave at the CUNY Graduate Center. Sandy Bahr is the director of the Sierra Club's Grand Canyon Chapter in Arizona; Kristin Koptiuch is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Arizona State University; Laura Pulido is Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California; and Julie Sze is Associate Professor of American Studies at UC Davis. >>

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