David M. Higgins (he/they) is associate professor of English and chair of the Department of Humanities and Communication at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Worldwide, and he is a senior editor for the Los Angeles Review of Books. David is the author of Reverse Colonization: Science Fiction, Imperial Fantasy, and Alt-Victimhood, which won the 2021 Science Fiction…
Category: S&S Shows
N. K. Jemisin: Jenny Bonnevier & Mark Soderstrom in Conversation About Dystopian Movements, Saturday, April 29, 2023, 12 noon (EDT)
This special edition of The Saturday Bookshelf showcases, “Kinship in the Fiction of N.K. Jemisin: Relations of Power and Resistance.” It examines the work of N.K. Jemisin through the lens of critical kinship studies. In a world increasingly suffering the effects of climate change, currently undergoing a sixth mass extinction, and where anti-democratic, racist, and…
Student Debt Abolition Now!: Astra Taylor, Jason Wozniak & Jeffrey Williams, Saturday, June 25, 1:00 p.m. (EDT)
Join us for an afternoon discussion with leading scholars and activists in the struggle to grasp–and abolish–the chains of student debt. We will be joined by co-organizers of the Debt Collective, Astra Taylor and Jason Wozniak, as well as long-time scholar and critic of student debt and the neoliberal university, Jeffrey J. Williams. This show…
Poets of Flowersong: Matt Sedillo, Briana Muñoz, David Romero, and Iris De Anda, Thursday, June 9, 2022
Thursday, June 9, 2022, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. – Dramatic readings and deep reflections on poetry and its relationship to political struggles, social and individual alike, this event showcases some of our movements’ cutting edge poets! We’ll be joined by returning S&S guest Matt Sedillo, as well as Flowersong Press poet-collaborators: Briana Muñoz, David Romero,…
Can We Have Solidarity Without Militarism? Views from Ukraine, Europe, and the USA, Sunday, May 29, 2022
Join our second show on the unfolding and devastating war in Ukraine. We welcome back two insightful guests, Olena Lyubchenko and Jonathan Feldman; they will be joined by outspoken anti-imperialist US labor leader, David Van Deusen, President of the Vermont AFL-CIO. Together, we’ll ask: Is it possible to build solidarity without relying on militarism –…
Bob Jessop, Michael Krätke, Heather Brown, Michael Löwy, and Peter Hudis – The Marx Revival: Key Concepts and New Interpretations, Saturday, May 21, 2022
This event is co-produced with the Marxist Education Project (NYC) The planet is in deep trouble because of capitalism, and Karl Marx, freed from the chains of “real socialism”, is being rediscovered all around the world as the thinker who provided us with its most insightful critique. The Marx Revival is the best, most complete…
John Bellamy Foster & Marcello Musto – The Marx Revival: Key Concepts and New Interpretations, Saturday, May 7, 2022
||2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. (Eastern), REGISTER HERE||This event is co-produced with the Marxist Education Project (NYC) The planet is in deep trouble because of capitalism, and Karl Marx, freed from the chains of “real socialism”, is being rediscovered all around the world as the thinker who provided us with its most insightful critique. The…
The Fictions That May Save Us, Vandana Singh in Conversation with Mark Soderstrom, April 23, 2022
[W]e depend on other species, we depend on the biogeological forces that move mountains and unleash the vagaries of weather and climate. We depend on these for our very survival. The trouble is that modern civilization conceals and dismisses these connections . . .. There is something pathologically wrong with a paradigm that obscures the…
Wende Marshall & Matt Meyer on Insurrectionary Uprisings, April 9, 2022
Wende & Matt discuss their new book, “Insurrectionary Uprisings: A Reader in Revolutionary Nonviolence and Decolonization” (DarajaPress.com) “I’ve often said that actions that grow out of love have the most power.. . . This powerful book brings together both classic and new works which will help empower future generations in building for peace and decolonization….
Chile, Social Movements & the Future of the Left, Saturday, March 26, 2022
Entering the 2000s, Chile’s rulers presented their country as the success story of neoliberalism with even so-called “socialist” leaders assuming management of the capitalist state. By the 2010s, however, waves of student and other popular movements gave the lie to this image. Mobilizing from below, students, pensioners, youth, diverse women’s and indigenous movements reawakened the…
Beyond Putin, Beyond NATO: Grasping the War in Ukraine, Sunday, March 20, 2022
1:00 p.m. Eastern: Join us for a deep dive into the war in Ukraine. We’ll be joined by voices from Ukraine & Russia – co-hosted by Prof. Aviva Chomsky. Our panel includes Olena Lyubchenko (Ukrainian scholar-activist, LeftEast.org), Suzi Weissman (Jacobin contributor), Jonathan Feldman (economist, U. Stockholm), Alisa LaSotnik (Ukrainian living in Spain), and Keti Chukhrov…
Reflections on International Women’s Day, March 12, 2022
Join scholar-activists Barbara Foley, Hester Eisenstein, and Zhongjin Li for a discussion of what International Women’s Day means today, and what the challenges and opportunities are in 2022 for thinking and linking women’s oppression and women’s liberation to struggles for a radically better world. The conversation will be hosted by S&S producer Lena Durkin. Barbara Foley is…
Joe Berry & Helena Worthen on Strategy for the Contingent Faculty Movement, February 22, 2022
Join lifelong labor activists and higher ed union strategists Joe Berry (Reclaiming the Ivory Tower) and Helena Worthen as they discuss their vital new book, *Power Despite Precarity: Strategies for the Contingent Faculty Movement in Higher Education*. Higher ed organizer Joe Ramsey will join as a respondent, in a show cohosted by veteran contingent organizer…
Jeremy Brecher Speaks to “Common Preservation: In a Time of Mutual Destruction,” January 13, 2022
As world leaders eschew cooperation to address climate change, nuclear proliferation, economic meltdown, and other threats to our survival, more and more people experience a pervasive sense of dread and despair. Is there anything we can do? What can put us on the course from mutual destruction to common preservation? In the past, social movements…
Rethinking Alternatives with Marx: Himani Bannerji, Michael Brie, Greg Claeys, Silvia Federici, & Marcello Musto, December 18, 2021
This is an off-cycle event; it starts at 2:00 p.m. (Eastern) on Saturday, 12/18/21. Video and event video coming soon.
Sophie Lewis on the Family & Abolition, December 12, 2021
Sophie Lewis and Mark Soderstrom discuss family abolition at the Community Church of Boston. Event description and links to follow.
Burning Girls: A Conversation with Author Veronica Schanoes, November 6, 2021
Co-hosts Kira Moodliar and Mark Soderstrom join with Veronica Schanoes in a conversation about her recent book, “Burning Girls and Other Stories” published by Tordotcom Publishing. Veronica Schanoes is an American author of fantasy stories and an associate professor in the department of English at Queens College, CUNY. From Tordotcom Publishing: When we came to…
“The Sickness is the System” – A Conversation with Richard Wolff, October 28, 2021
Richard D. Wolff is Professor of Economics Emeritus, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and a Visiting Professor in the Graduate Program in International Affairs of the New School University, NYC. He is the founder of Democracy at Work and host of their nationally syndicated show Economic Update. His latest book is The Sickness is the System:…
A Conversation with Max Haiven on Revenge Capitalism, October 9, 2021
Join Rachel Yarashus Patten and Lena Durkin in a conversation with Max Haiven about his recent book, Revenge Capitalism. Max is a writer, teacher, and the Canada Research Chair in Culture, Media and Social Justice at Lakehead University, where he co-directs the ReImagining Value Action Lab (RiVAL). His books include Revenge Capitalism (2020), Art after…
Uniting Higher Ed Labor to Fight for the Common Good, September 16, 2021
This summer, over 300 higher ed faculty, staff, and student leaders and activists from dozens of union locals in 30 states (representing over 400,000 higher ed workers!) came together to form a new nation-wide coalition: Higher Ed Labor United (HELU). Coming from across faculty ranks and staff job categories, including both tenure track and contingent…
Democratic Socialists of America: The Strategic Challenges Facing the Left After the National Convention, August 24, 2021
Following a successful national convention (August 2021), Democratic Socialists of America faces a still pandemic-ridden nation, beset with extractive inequalities, political dysfunction, and the rapid onset of catastrophic climate change. As the largest organized, left-wing formation, the moment poses special strategic and organizational challenges, ones surfaced in Bill Fletcher, Jr.’s “The Modern Tecumseh” essay. In…
Technology, Power and Resistance in the New Gilded Age with Nicole Aschoff, August 21, 2021
Join The Saturday Bookshelf in a conversation with Nicole Aschoff about her book, “The Smartphone Society: Technology, Power, and Resistance in the New Gilded Age” on Saturday, August 21st at Noon EST (https://us02web.zoom.us/j/5999353012)! From Beacon Press: “Our smartphones have brought digital technology into the most intimate spheres of life. It’s time to take control of…
Crisis in the Caribbean with Vijay Prashad, Ezili Dantò, and Moise St. Louis, July 22, 2021
Makers of two of the world’s most consequential revolutions, the people of Cuba and Haiti have paid the price for attempting to set forth a freer and more just world – with forced reverse-reparations, sanctions, invasions, and constant threats of “regime change.” By July 2021, in diverse ways, these matters have come to a head….
A Conversation with Eleni Macrakis on “A People’s Guide to Greater Boston,” June 26, 2021
A Saturday Bookshelf Event: A People’s Guide to Greater Boston reveals the region’s richness and vibrancy in ways that are neglected by traditional area guidebooks and obscured by many tourist destinations. Affirming the hopes, interests, and struggles of individuals and groups on the receiving end of unjust forms of power, the book showcases the ground-level…
Adjunct Lit & Life: Christine Smallwood & Maggie Doherty, June 17, 2021
Join Shelter & Solidarity for a discussion with special guests, novelist Christine Smallwood (author of The Life of The Mind) and scholar Maggie Doherty (author of The Equivalents and the recent Nation article on “Adjunct Hell”) as we explore the relationship between art, experience and activism in a contemporary higher education system increasingly characterized by…
Invisible No Longer: Confronting Anti-Asian Racism and Building Community Resistance, May 20, 2021
Reports of anti-Asian racism throughout the U.S. have surged during the COVID-19 pandemic, but have not been the subject of sustained public attention until recent months. The deadly March 16th Atlanta spa shootings, along with a spike in lethal attacks against persons of Asian descent, have brought increased visibility to a form of racism that…
A Conversation with Marge Piercy on Art & Politics, May 13, 2021
Join Shelter & Solidarity and independent socialist magazine Monthly Review for a live conversation with path-breaking radical thinker, activist, and best-selling, world-famous author Marge Piercy. For the past fifty years, few creative writers have been in deeper dialogue with the movement for emancipatory revolution than poet and novelist Marge Piercy. Author of over 20 books…
A Conversation with Ranabir Samaddar on “Karl Marx and the Postcolonial Age,” May 8, 2021
Paula Rauhala and Kira Moodliar join in conversation with Ranabir Samaddar to explore Ranabir’s new book, “Karl Marx and the Postcolonial Age.” From Palgrave MacMillian: This book seeks to explicitly engage Marxist and post-colonial theory to place Marxism in the context of the post-colonial age. Those who study Marx, particularly in the West, often lack…
The Post Capitalism Conference: Building the Solidarity Economy, April 20, 2021
Join David Cobb and Nicola Walters to preview “The Post Capitalism Conference: Building the Solidarity Economy” (part of EarthDayMayDay.org) at Humboldt State University – but open to anyone with online. The conference kicks off on Earth Day, Thursday, April 22, 2021, and includes movement luminaries like Wende Marshall, Richard Wolf, Kali Akuno, Melodie Meyer, Emily Kawano,…
Art & the Struggle for Social Change, April 15, 2021
Live performances and discussions with socially engaged artists from across the country, including radical poets Matt Sedillo and Raymond ‘Nat’ Turner, Philadelphia-based musician Melanie Hsu, progressive folk singer-songwriter David Rovics, and somatic artist Marina Lopez. Co-hosted with Tim Sheard (of Hard Ball Press) and Linda Liu, this show will provide a chance to engage both…
David Roediger on the Sinking “Middle Class,” April 3, 2021
Join Co-hosts Rachel Patten and Bobbi-lee Smart in a conversation with David Roediger, Saturday, April 3rd at 12 PM EDT, about his new book, The Sinking Middle Class. Joe Biden’s current emphasis on the “American middle class” is typical of centrist Democrat strategy. It is used as a cudgel to defend the party against more…
Black Revolutionary Thought for Our Times? March 25, 2021
Throughout modern history, struggles against Black oppression have generated some of our most powerful and persuasive radical voices, often resonating across lines of race and nation. How do black revolutionary thinkers of the past–from black Marxists like Richard Wright to Black Panther participants like Fred Hampton and Assata Shakur–to contemporary voices like Mumia Abu Jamal,…
The 1990s-2020s: The Millennial Turns and this Decisive Decade, March 11, 2021
The 2020s may prove to be “The Decisive Decade.” But what are the origins of the movements of these times? And what difference do those histories make today? We often are called to look back to the 1960s for lessons. But what of the 1990s and the movements at the turn of the millennium? Join Bill…
Progressive Media in an Age of Covid & Capitalist Crisis, February 25, 2021
In an era of growing corporate control over “the news” (from TV to social media platforms), the role played by independent, alternative, and left media is more precious than ever. Yet the corporate-dominated media landscape, compounded by the Covid19 crisis, creates new barriers and challenges for left and independent media alike. How are independent and…
Stepping Up for Texas! – S&S Special Show, February 24, 2021
The freeze set in, and the lights went out! And Texans found that free-market fundamentalists can’t keep you warm and definitely won’t keep the water running. Also, climate change does not care about ideology! It might be too early to talk about the numbers, the suffering, and the resistance, but neighbors are helping neighbors. Even…
Biden’s “Building Back Better”? New Deal or Same Ol’ Deal? February 11, 2021
Political economists Doug Henwood (of The Nation, Jacobin, and Left Business Observer) and Bryan Snyder (of Dollars & Sense) join us to dissect the newly installed Biden administration and what it means for the people and for left politics in our time. What is the meaning of Biden’s actions since taking office? His cabinet appointments?…
Socialist Hopes Versus American Realities? January 28, 2021
In the yawning gap between the crises of economy, environment, and survival on the one hand, and ruling class responses, on the other hand, is there space for socialist solutions and the movements that can deliver them? If so, how will it be filled? We answer these questions with a thoughtful and diverse group of…
Chris Hedges at the Community Church of Boston – On the Culture of Despair, December 20, 2020
Shelter & Solidarity’s host, Joe Ramsey hosted Chris Hedges at an event organized by the Community Church of Boston Correction: Dean Stevens is the Community Church of Boston’s Administrator & Musical Director. Contrary to the opening credits, he is not the Congregational Director. This was an editing error on our part. During Chris Hedges’s talk…
The Year Behind, the Year Ahead: A Community Roundtable, December 17, 2020
Join Shelter & Solidarity on Thursday, Dec. 17, from 7-8:30 pm EST, as we close out 2020 with a very special roundtable featuring return visits from some of the great guests we’ve had on S&S in our first year. A panel of experienced organizers, activists, scholars and artists will help kick off a community discussion…
Art & Resistance, December 3, 2020
Featuring performances and conversations with revolutionary artists:Demetrius Noble, Eartha Watts Hicks, Rafael Medina, Raymond Nat Turner, Linda Liu, Ricardo Levins Morales, Tracy Garrison, Tim Sheard, & Dean Stevens
Populism! Peril or Promise in US Politics, November 19, 2020
On November 19th we will take a deep dive into the history, myths, practices, and legacies of popular politics and “small-d” democracy in the United States with scholar and public historian Michael Lansing.The populist tradition is a significant, controversial, and often misunderstood strain of U.S. history. Lansing’s book, Insurgent Democracy: The Nonpartisan League in North…
What Just Happened?! Election Day & Next Steps for the Left, November 5, 2020
On Thursday, November 5, 2020, DSA-affiliated David Duhalde, The Nation’s Liza Featherstone, the Green Party’s Jill Stein, and sociologist Ben Manski engaged in a lively conversation about the US elections – together with host Joe Ramsey.
Trump’s Walls Must Fall – Greg Grandin and Avi Chomsky, October 15, 2020
We take a deep dive with 2020 Pulitzer Prize-winner Greg Grandin, author of The End of the Myth: From the Frontier to the Border Wall in the Mind of America (among many other books). We will also be joined by scholar and activist Aviva Chomsky, (author of Undocumented and “They Take Our Jobs!” and 20…
Mass Murder and the Making of Our Times, October 1, 2020
October 1 marks the fifty-fifth anniversary of the beginning of one of the worst episodes of mass murder in the twentieth century: the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Indonesians in 1965-1966. Organized and directed by Indonesia’s military, the killings targeted people associated with the country’s communist party, the world’s largest outside of China and…
Weaponizing Antisemitism Allegations, September 24, 2020
Amid a resurgence of xenophobic nationalism, Islamophobia, Antisemitism, and racism more generally, how do we refute charges of Antisemitism that are broadly leveled against advocates for Black liberation, immigrant justice and national self-determination for the Palestinian people? To help us navigate these questions, Lara Kiswani from Beit Iksa and Aqir, Palestine, and Executive Director of…
Know Your Enemy: Grasping the Nature of the Right-Wing Threat, September 3, 2020
Recent years have seen a resurgence of right-wing nationalism and authoritarian political movements, from Trump in the US to Bolsanaro in Brazil and to Modi in India. How are we best to grasp the nature of these contemporary political trends? Are Trump and the movement to support him usefully understood as a form of neo-fascism?…
Sustaining Ourselves & Each Other Through Crisis Times with Victor Narro & Michal Osterweil, August 27, 2020
Feeling stressed? Seeking strategies for keeping healthy and connected during this period of protracted pandemic, economic crisis, and physical isolation? Join us for our third Shelter & Solidarity social hour – a community discussion about how we can best sustain ourselves, each other, our organizations and movements during these pandemic times. We’ll be led into…
John Lawrence on Organizing the Democratic Capacity for Transformative Change, August 20, 2020
Building on a recent paper by John W. Lawrence, “Organizing the Democratic Capacity for Transformative Change: The 2020 Election and Beyond” published in Socialism and Democracy, this conversation discusses and debates the organizational and political requirements for the left to grow and become an organized voice and transformative force based in the working class. Speaker…
Back to School Blues? The Fight for a Just & Safe School Year, August 13, 2020
As we roll into late August, the start of the school year is upon us. What will this Fall look like for students, for teachers and staff, for parents and our communities? What threats to safety, to the quality and equity of education, and to working conditions are people facing? And how are they responding…