To commemorate Trans remembrance day I am including various readings found on @TheoryReads (twitter). https://twitter.com/TheoryReads/status/1329936851906523136?s=20
WHY BLACK GENDER CONVERSATIONS WILL ALWAYS FAIL UNLESS WE CENTER BLACK CHILDREN
“Everything I know about being femme I learned from Sula”
OUR GENDERS ARE MORE THAN OUR BODIES: AFFIRMING TRANS IDENTITY BEYOND APPEARANCE
While /r/CTH was still unbanned, we had a Pride Month collection dubbed the "Gay Agenda". If you go to Perusall you can still read them.
Happy weekend, hope everyone of you comrades is safe and cuddled up with a nice book this coming holiday.
I <3 you all
Debt: the First 5000 Years by David Graeber
It's really good, and really thought-provoking. I can only read about a chapter a day because each one gives me a lot to think about.
So far the thing that's resonating most with me is the distinction between intangible debt that mostly serves to create social relationships and obligations, and monetary debt which can be purely transaction. The whole "gig economy" is turning activities that used to be the former, like giving your friend a ride, into the latter and increasing social alienation as a result.
I'm about half way through Capital. The first couple chapters were a bit tough to get through, but now it's getting good.
Inventing reality by Michael Parenti, I was dissatisfied with Manufacturing consent it's too lib.
Its so much better than manufacturing consent. I really want to find a physical copy so I can lend it to people, but its like barely in print anymore.
The propaganda model by it self is fine, but its critique of media remains entirely liberal in perspective, it lacks a more biting anti imperials critique. Finally the books spends far too much time proving the validity of its model with case after case of vietnam era reporting.
Just finished Bullshit Jobs by David Graeber. A really good read, and very accessible. Next on deck is A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn.
Currently juggling four non-fiction reads that I'm moving through quickly
Just finished A Century of Revolution, which is an excellent advanced text. It is a collection of several essays examining revolutionary and counter-revolutionary violence in Latin America throughout the twentieth century. It is inspired by the work of historian Arno Mayer, two of whose works I've recently acquired as well.
Greg Grandin's Empire's Workshop, on how American Cold War policy in Latin America shaped the Bush Administration's modern "free market crusader" imperial foreign policy. It was written in 2006 and so very much reflects the time. TBH it mostly retreads ground I've already covered.
Grandin's The Last Colonial Massacre is on deck.
At home I'm slowly working through Parenti's Inventing Reality (the bloody paper it's printed on ruins my highlighters quickly).
I'm also rapidly moving through Stephen F Cohen's final work (he died this year) War With Russia?, which is a compilation of editorials and articles he wrote between 2014-2019 for non-mainstream news outlets ferociously criticizing American foreign policy toward Russia and the Russiagate neo-McCarthyite hysteria. If you want to understand the new Cold War that has been escalating between the US and Russia for at least the last 12 years, I strongly recommend you consult Cohen's works as they offer insights you'll never see in more mainstream sources.
Nice work, Grandin seems really interesting!
Where'd u manage to get a copy of Inventing Reality btw?
I bought "The Jakarta Method"
I really don't want to read it. Gonna be depressing.
Just finished motorcycle diaries and definitely plan on watching the movie. Bought State and Revolution as well as 10 Days that shook the world
Taco USA - Gustavo Arellano. A pretty poor history of Mexican food in the USA. Interesting anecdotes in an almost paint-by-numbers mass market nonfiction book.
Not theory but im going through Frank Herbert's Dune series again.
I’m making my way through a short story compilation called American Fantastic Tales, but I wanted to share this very short story by Stephen Crane because it made me smile.
This looks pretty interesting, I've been meaning to lookup resources on this.
https://ldn.coop/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Think_Outside_the_Boss-How_to_Create_a_Worker-Owned_Business-1.pdf
The resources are scarce and mostly not physically printed. I fount this useful as well: https://project-equity.org/about-us/publications/case-studies-business-conversions-to-worker-cooperatives/
Set The Night on Fire: LA in the Sixties by Mike Davis and John Weiner. I’m about half way through and it’s very good. Huge survey of leftist movements that worked within LA in the 60s.
How is it? Barely understandable? Deliberately trying to piss people off? Both?