Hi everyone, what are you reading this week?
As a reminder: The Non-Fictional Book Club is reading Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Chapter 2 is due Monday (9/7/2020).
Noname's Book Club Announced this month's picks: Disability Visibility & Capitalism & Disability
RIP David Graeber, author of Debt 5,000 years & Bullshit Jobs | Get one of his books for free by Prickly Press Publishers Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology
Hey, have you found Cities Under Siege yet? If not, I’ve a copy. HMU.
Any chance they have Partisan Ruptures, Self management, Market Reform and the Spectre of Socialist Yugoslavia?
Pedagogy of the Oppressed, hoping to also get Equal Rites and Rocannon's World in to start reading this week.
Lovecraft Country cuz I found out it was a book too. Only just started but it's good so far.
how is the book, the series has been a bit uneven (I still like it tho).
Definitely better than the show but I really liked the latest episode.
Started Reactionary Mind. Not far in but I like the writing style so far.
Union organizer Jane McAlevey's Raising Expectations, and a book on permaculture. RIP David Graeber, one of the most brilliant thinkers in my lifetime.
Been reading Pedagogy of the Oppressed for the book club, Bullshit Jobs in memory to David Graeber, and am planning to start Meditations by Marcus Aurelius.
Reading One Vast Winter Count by Colin Calloway because I realized I don't know nearly enough Native American history. Got some pretty great anecdotes about the Iroquois playing the French and the English off one another, tribes on the Mississippi saying the French smell and are basically idiots, the massive Pueblo revolution against Spanish rule that worked for like twenty years, stuff like that. Really comprehensive of the American West pre-1800 that I highly recommend.
The Cold War and American Science: The Military-Industrial-Academic Complex at MIT and Stanford
It's for a class I'm sitting in on, and holy shit was it hard to find online.