Online Features

CFP: Movement Politics

Social Text Collective

This special issue of Social Text will examine discourses of physical debility and social mobility in concert with social movement politics, broadly construed.  The broader rubric of disability is an especially apt lens through which to launch a political agenda, if only … Continue reading “CFP: Movement Politics”

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I am not an activist. This is not a protest.

Evan Neely

One of the members of my working group, The People’s Think Tank, recommended me as a good person to speak to young activists last week at the Civil Rights Student Summit in New York organized by Teaching Matters. The folder they gave to the set of people they brought in to speak to the students, most of whom were in eighth grade, said “community activist” on the front. Reading that brought me back to a discussion facilitated by the Think Tank on May Day, where we got to talking about what it meant for us to be activists. When it was my turn to speak, the only words on offer were something like “I really don’t like to think of myself as an activist. I kind of want to think of myself as a normal person.

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Staying Alive

Ashley Dawson

Survival is our politics now. So says French political anthropologist Marc Abélès in The Politics of Survival. And so say many cultural producers today, although this admission often comes by way of what cultural theorist Fredric Jameson called the political … Continue reading “Staying Alive”

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Radical Cross-Currents in Black Berlin

Social Text Collective


Tavia Nyong’o
(New York University) and Eva Boesenberg (Humboldt Universität) will present a one-day symposium on the radical black presence in arts, music and literature in Berlin since the 1980.

Keynote Speaker:

Alex Weheliye (Northwestern University)

“White Brothers With No Soul?” The Racial Politics of Techno in Berlin

The event will also feature a free screening of the new documentary “Audre Lorde’s Legacy in Berlin.”

The event will be held Friday, July 27th, 2012, at Humboldt-Universität, Berlin, Dorotheenstr. 24, Raum 1.501. It is free and open to the public.

Please visit http://radicalblackberlin.wordpress.com for more information.

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