Radical media, politics and culture.

Events

9th Annual National Conference on Organized Resistance

February 3–5, 2006, American University, Washington DC

NCOR is an annual event that brings together activists from a variety of
issues, struggles, ideologies and backgrounds for a weekend of learning
and reflecting on the state of progressive movements occurring locally,
nationally and worldwide. Through diverse workshops, panel discussions,
skillshares, tabling, and the creation of an open and safe space, NCOR
seeks to promote organized action amongst participants against the
injustices and inequalities that we confront in our daily lives and in the
world. NCOR is held on the main campus of American University in northwest
Washington, DC.

JTC writes:

"Nietzsche & Cinema" Film Series

New York City, Winter, 2006

The NIETZSCHE CIRCLE announces the inauguration of its film and discussion series
NIETZSCHE & CINEMA

NIETZSCHE & CINEMA is a recurring film series which will explore the relationship between Nietzsche’s philosophy and cinema, examining his influence on screenwriters, directors, film theorists such as Gilles Deleuze, as well as the affect of his aesthetic vision on cinema.

Films will be screened which explicitly explore his life or philosophy or which embody the Nietzschean spirit: works in which a transvaluation of values is sought, or similar critiques of culture, religion, art, and politics are being made, while we will also examine the misappropriation, distortion, and abuse of Nietzsche’s ideas. When possible, directors and screenwriters will be invited to discuss their works with noted film critics, cinema historians, and philosophy professors. At the end of each session, a dialogue will be conducted with the spectators. The series will feature classic films, lesser known works, short and experimental films, as well as contemporary cinematic works. When possible, all works will be screened in their original format.

NYC SPACE, Winter Courses 2006


The New SPACE (The New School for Pluralistic Anti-Capitalist Education)

Winter 2006 Courses

THE SPIRIT OF UTOPIA

Alex Steinberg

Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

8 sessions: January 25 - March 22

(no class February 8)

Tuition: $90 - $115, sliding scale

MARX'S _CAPITAL_, VOLUMES II AND III

Andrew Kliman

Wednesdays, 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

15 sessions: January 25 - May 17

(except for March 22 and April 12)

Tuition: $150 - $180, sliding scale

(Vol. II only: $75 - $100; Vol. III only: $100 - $120)

ERICH FROMM'S ENCOUNTER WITH MARX AND FREUD

Charles Herr

Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

6 Sessions: January 31 - March 7

Tuition: $75 - $100, sliding scale

FROM DADA TO ANTHROPOFFERJISM

Erika Biddle

Alternate Tuesdays, 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

6 Sessions: January 31, February 14, 28,
March 14, 28 and April 4

Tuition: $75 - $100, Sliding Scale

See course descriptions below. Please see the New SPACE website for
additional information on courses and registration.

NYC Grassroots Media Conference

Saturday February 11th, 2006


New School University

65 Fifth Ave at Thirteenth St

$20 Adult Pre-Registration, $30 Day Of Conference, $5 Youth (21 and under)

Register now by visiting:
here.

or visiting Bluestockings Bookstore: 172 Allen St at Stanton St in Manhattan

Call Paper Tiger TV at (212) 420-9045 For Information on Group Rates

+Proposal Submissions still being accepted:

Proposals

+Advertise or Purchase a table for your organization:

Promotions

+Submit your work for our Art Exhibition & Film
Screening:
Submissions

+Tell Us Your Organizations Supports the Conference by Endorsing the Event:

Endorse

”Non-Violent Executions”

Stand-Up Comic Steve Ben Israel Performs His Classic One-Man Show

New York City, Jan. 10, 2006


The January Anarchist Forum

On Tuesday, January 10, at 7:30pm, the Libertarian Book Club's
Anarchist Forum will present stand-up comic and Obie winner Steve Ben
Israel who will perform his one-man show ”Non-Violent Executions.” Although
it contains both comic and political elements Ben Israel considers the show
to be a séance to contact the living.

Steve made his debut in the Greenwich
Village coffee house Renaissance in 1959 and since has performed often with
the Living Theatre. After the presentation Steve will have an extensive
open discussion with the audience about how performance art can be shaped
around social and political questions.

The event will take place at the Brecht Forum, 451 West Street,
Manhattan (between Bank and Bethune streets)
(212-242-4201).


Take an A, C, E, or L train to the 14th Street and 8th Avenue subway stop
or take a 1, 2, or 3 train to the 14th Street and 7th Avenue stop.


Everybody is welcome and invited to come and to have their say. Admission
is free for the presentation, but a contribution to aid the LBC is
suggested. If you have questions, contact the LBC /Anarchist Forum,
212-979-8353 or e-mail: roberterler@erols.com

:: Call for Contributions // Presentations // Provocations::

The Future in The Present: Occupying the Social Factory

May 2-4, 2006 - Digby House at Oadby, Leicester, UK

http://www.refusingstructures.net/future.html

From everyday insurgencies to global antagonisms, recent decades have borne witness to multiple and overlapping cycles of social struggle, as well as attempts to incorporate these sources of social wealth and creativity. From transformations in the circuits of global capital to the morphing of state structures, border controls and forms of sovereignty, the development of neoliberal governmentality has constantly run to catch up with our multiplicitous desires to create new forms of self-determining community and sociality. Multidirectional lines of command attempt to recuperate innovations at the level of everyday life, while myriad microrevolutions branch out, weave together new possibilities, and sometimes directly attack the networks of control.

What is the meaning of autonomy today, both as a theoretical category and as a practice? And what can the thought of refusal contribute to the organization of refusals in our daily lives? How can we create forms of antagonism directed against the lines of command that cut across the economic and social fabric, and which seek to incorporate affective, biological, and symbolic processes into forms of production? How can we prevent our antagonism being subsumed into the working of power and turned them against us? Rather than to creating overarching concepts that describe a new historical epoch, what would it mean to look at the specific modulations of how productive forces and regimes of command are changing in response to the social creativity and struggles of political actors? And what possibilities for political and social change are contained within these transformations? This is to start from the multiple inscriptions of power and resistance: from the bare life and bodies of the migrant worker to the precarious temp employee, from the unwaged to laborers in export processing zone archipelagos.

This gathering will attempt to break down the format and constraints of the traditional academic conference as well as forms of theorizing divorced from on-going social struggles and organizing. It will seek to create a living dialogue and encuentro, a series of collisions of bodies and minds, drawing from the history of autonomist politics and organizing, to draw out possible directions for the future buried beneath the weight of the present. Rather than fixing autonomous practices as objects of study it will draw together theorists, organizers, and activists considering questions of what class composition, insurgent sociality, and autonomous political practice could mean today. Possible topics could include but are not limited to:

- The reception of the immaterial labour and biopolitical production concepts.

- The social factory and the new forms of metropolitan strike.

- The refusal of work and the rise of cognitive proletariat.

- Constituent power, exodus, and non-state democracy.

- Gender, libidinal economy and affective labour.

- Formats of resistance: class, movement, multitude, network.

- Strategies of resistance: biopolitical weapons and radical imagery.

- San Precario, the precariat and the Euromayday.

- Digital commons, networked multitudes, knowledge economy.

Proposals for discussions, presentations, and panels of 500 – 1000 words should be sent to futureinthepresent@refusingstructures.net by Friday January 27th, 2006.

There will be an issue of the futureinthepresent@refusingstructures.net or visit http://www.refusingstructures.net/future.html. Registration before January 31st is highly encouraged.

Sponsored by the Autonomedia

"The Money of the Future"

United Transnational Republics

A Lecture in Munich, Dec. 15, 2005


While the US-dollar is very well suited to promote US national
interests, the creation of a transnational currency is indispensable in
order to protect transnational citizen interests (protection of the
environment, human rights ...).

After last weeks lecture in Münster, the United Transnational Republics
are invited to present this Thursday, December 15th, a lecture in Munich as
a part of the series of lectures "The money of the future".

CURRENCIES AS MEANS OF POWER

GOLD AS FOURTH POWER OF GLOBAL DEMOCRACY

Georg Zoche, Central Bank of the United Transnational Republics

Series of lectures "The money of the future"
at the Seidlvilla, 80802 Munich, Nikolaiplatz 1b (U3/6 Giselastr.)
Thursday, December 15th, 9:30 pm

Admission: 5,- Euro, 4,- Euro reduced or 10 Talents

SPACE Winter Courses, 2006


The New SPACE
(The New School for Pluralistic Anti-Capitalist Education)

Winter 2006 Courses, New York City

THE SPIRIT OF UTOPIA

Alex Steinberg

Wednesdays, 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

8 sessions: January 25 - March 15

Tuition: $90 - $115, sliding scale

MARX'S _CAPITAL_, VOLUMES II AND III

Andrew Kliman

Wednesdays, 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

15 sessions: January 25 - May 17

(except for March 22 and April 12)

Tuition: $150 - $180, sliding scale

(Vol. II only: $75 - $100; Vol. III only: $100 - $120)

ERICH FROMM'S ENCOUNTER WITH MARX AND FREUD

Charles Herr

Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.

6 Sessions: January 31 - March 7

Tuition: $75 - $100, sliding scale

FROM DADA TO ANTHROPOFFERJISM

Erika Biddle

Alternate Tuesdays, 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

6 Sessions: January 31, February 14, 28,

March 14, 28 and April 4

Tuition: $75 - $100, Sliding Scale

See course descriptions below. Please see the New SPACE website for additional information on courses and registration.

War Resisters League Funeral March

New York City, Dec. 9, 2005

Call To Action

The New York City Local of the War Resisters League (WRL)
will hold a funeral march on Friday, December 9, 2005, to
protest the loss of life in the war being waged in Iraq.


Gathering at the north end of Washington Square Park
(under the arch) at 5:30 PM on Friday, participants will
step off at 6:00 PM proceeding to the recruiting center
at 157 Chambers Street, near the Borough of Manhattan
Community College (BMCC). This is the second of a series
of regular monthly marches that will be maintained until
the war in Iraq is ended and all troops are brought home.

Santa wrote:


Santacon 2005
New York City, Dec. 10, 2005

Ho-Ho-Ho!
Tomorrow is the first day of December! And you all
know what that
means...SANTA CLAUS IS COMING TO TOWN!
To prepare yourselves for NYC SantaCon 2005, taking
place — and
taking over! — on Saturday, December 10, Santa has
a few favors to
ask:

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