Burn This Book
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Weather Underground Rises from the Ashes: They're Baack!
Weather Underground Rises from the Ashes: They're Baack! I attended part of a January 20, 2006, "day workshop of interventions" — aka "a day of dialogic interventions" — at Columbia University on "Radical Politics and the Ethics of Life."[1] The event aimed "to stage a series of encounters . to bring to light . the political aporias [sic] erected by the praxis of urban guerrilla groups" in Europe and the United States from the 1960s to the 80s.[2] Hosted by Columbia's Anthropology Department, workshop speakers included veterans and leaders of the Weather Underground Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers, historian Jeremy Varon, poststructuralist theorist Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak and a dozen others. The panel I sat through was just awful.[3] Veterans of Weather (as well as some fans) seem to be on a drive to rehabilitate, cleanse, and perhaps revive it — not necessarily as a new organization, but rather as an ideological component of present and future movements. There have been signs of such a sanitization and romanticization for some time. A landmark in this rehabilitation is Bill Ayers, Fugitive Days: A Memoir (Beacon Press 2001; Penguin Books 2003). This is a dubious account, full of anachronisms, inaccuracies, unacknowledged borrowings from unnamed sources (such as the documentary, Atomic Cafe, 17-19), adding up to an attempt to cover over the fact that Ayers was there only for a part of the things he describes in a volume that nonetheless presents itself as a memoir. It's also faux literary and soft core ("warm and wet and welcoming"(68)), "ruby mouth"(38), "she felt warm and moist"(81)), full of archaic sexism, littered with boasts of Ayers's sexual achievements, utterly untouched by feminism. -
Extensions of Remarks 10509
May 9, 1979 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS 10509 MENT REPORT.-The Secretary shall set forth available to the United States Geological -Page 274, line 1, strike "(b) (1)" and in in each report to the Congress under the Survey, the Bureau of Mines, or any other lieu thereof insert "(c) (2)". Mining and Minerals Policy Act of 1970 a agency or instrumentality of the United Page 333, lines 14 and 15, strike "after the summary of the pertinent information States. date of enactment of this Act". (other than proprietary or other confidential (Additional technical amendments to -Page 275, line 8, change "28" to "27" and information) relating to minerals which is Udall-Anderson substitute (H.R. 3651) .) change "33" to "34". EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS A NONFUEL MINERAL POLICY: WE Of course, the usual antagonists are lined These Americans descend from .Japa CAN NO LONGER WAIT up on each side of this policy debate. But, nese, Chinese, Korean, and Filipino an as Nevada Congressman J. D. Santini points cestors, as well as from Hawaii and t'iher out in our p . 57 feature, their arguments Pacific Islands such as Samoa, Fiji, and HON. JIM SANTINI go by one another like ships in the night with nothing happening-until the lid blows Tahiti. In southern California, where OF NEVADA off. we have the greatest concentration of IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES But, how do you get the public excited Asian and Pacific Americans anywhere Wednesday, May 9, 1979 about metal shortages? in the Nation, their valuable involvemept Even Congressman Santini's well-meant in the growth and prosperity of our local • Mr. -
New Left Collection
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf3k4002tq No online items Register of the New Left collection Finding aid prepared by Ron Bulatoff; revised and edited by David Jacobs and Emilia Schrier Hoover Institution Archives 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA, 94305-6003 (650) 723-3563 [email protected] © 1998, 2014 Register of the New Left 69001 1 collection Title: New Left collection Date (inclusive): 1923-2004 Collection Number: 69001 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Archives Language of Material: English Physical Description: 70 manuscript boxes, 4 oversize boxes, 1 oversize folder, 1 envelope, 1 microfilm, 3 phonorecords(28.0 linear feet) Abstract: The New Left Collection largely relates to radical movements for political and social change in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s. It is the largest resource in the archives devoted to this turbulent period in American history. Organized alphabetically by subject file, the collections consists of serial issues and other printed matter, and includes a great deal of ephemera, especially leaflets and flyers. Topics covered in the collection include the movement against the Vietnam War; student radicalism; the civil rights movement and black militancy; revolutionary organizations; the women's liberation movement; and the counter-culture. Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Archives in 1969. An increment was added in 2011. Related Collection(s) Radical Right Collection, Hoover Institution Archives Accruals Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. -
The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR)
The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) Background The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is a Washington D.C.-based 501(c)(3) non-profit organization with 28 independent chapters around the country. Since its founding in 1994, CAIR has sought to position itself as the leading American Muslim civil rights organization. In recent years, much of its activity has centered on responding to the proliferation of anti-Muslim incidents and sentiment expressed nationwide. However, at times the organization’s positions and work have been shadowed by early connections between some of CAIR’s top leadership and organizations that are or were affiliated with HamasHamasHamasHamas. Hamas has long been associated with seeking the complete elimination of the State of Israel and with suicide bombings that have targeted civilians, and is designated a foreign terrorist organization (FTO) by the United States. Hamas is also viewed by the EU as a global terrorist organization.1 In addition, over the years many in CAIR’s leadership have expressed, and in a number of cases continue to express, anti-Zionist rhetoric. This has included statements that demonize American supporters of Israel who believe that a connection with Israel is an essential part of their Jewish identity. CAIR also frequently partners with vehemently anti-Zionist and anti-Israel groups like JewishJewishJewishJewish V VVVoiceoiceoiceoice for forforfor P PPPeaceeaceeaceeace (JVP) and American Muslims for Palestine, many of whose members employ extreme rhetoric and questionable tactics to demonize and disrupt pro-Israel activity. CAIR and Israel 1 / 14 Although its main organizational mission is upholding the rights of Muslims in the United States, CAIR also comments on international issues, with a particular focus on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. -
FP 24.2 Summer2004.Pdf (5.341Mb)
The Un vers ty of W scons n System Feminist Periodicals A current listing of contents WOMEN'S STUDIES Volume 24, Number 2 Summer 2004 Published by Phyllis Holman Weisbard LIBRARIAN Women's Studies Librarian Feminist Periodicals A current listing of contents Volume 24, Number 2 (Summer 2004) Periodical literature is the culling edge ofwomen'sscholarship, feminist theory, and much ofwomen's culture. Feminist Periodicals: A Current Listing ofContents is pUblished by the Office of the University of Wisconsin System Women's Studies Librarian on a quarterly basis with the intent of increasing public awareness of feminist periodicals. It is our hope that Feminist Periodicals will serve several purposes: to keep the reader abreast of current topics in feminist literature; to increase readers' familiarity with a wide spectrum of feminist periodicals; and to provide the requisite bibliographic information should a reader wish to subscribe to ajournal or to obtain a particular article at her library or through interlibrary loan. (Users will need to be aware of the limitations of the new copyright law with regard to photocopying of copyrighted materials.) Table ofcontents pages from current issues ofmajor feministjournals are reproduced in each issue of Feminist Periodicals, preceded by a comprehensive annotated listing of all journals we have selected. As publication schedules vary enormously, not every periodical will have table of contents pages reproduced in each issue of FP. The annotated listing provides the following information on each journal: 1. Year of first pUblication. 2. Frequency of publication. 3. U.S. subscription price(s). 4. SUbscription address. 5. Current editor. 6. -
Bernardine Dohrn
Bernardine Dorhn: Never the Good Girl, Not Then, not Now: An Interview By Jonah Raskin Who doesn’t have a reaction to the name and the reputation of Bernadine Dohrn? Is there anyone over the age of 60 who doesn’t remember her role at the outrageous Days of Rage demonstrations, her picture on FBI “wanted posters,” or her dramatic surrender to law enforcement officials in Chicago after a decade as a fugitive? To former members of SDS, anti-war activists, Yippies, Black Panthers, White Panthers, women’s liberationists, along with students and scholars of Weatherman and the Weather Underground, she probably needs no introduction. Sam Green featured her in his award-winning 2002 film, The Weather Underground. Todd Gitlin added to her iconic stature in his benchmark cultural history, The Sixties, though he was never on her side of the ideological splits or she on his. Dozens of books about the long decade of defiance have documented and mythologized Dohrn’s role as an American radical. Of course, her flamboyant husband and long-time partner, Bill Ayers, has been at her side for decades, aiding and abetting her much of the time, and adding to her legendary renown and notoriety. Born in 1942, and a diligent student at the University of Chicago, she attended law school there and in the late 1960s “stepped out of the role of the good girl," as she once put it. She has never really stepped back into it again, though she’s been a wife, a mother, and a professional woman for more years than she was a street fighting woman. -
An Interdisciplinary Journal
FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITA LISM FAST CAPITALISMFast Capitalism FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM ISSNFAST XXX-XXXX CAPITALISM FAST Volume 1 • Issue 1 • 2005 CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITA LISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITA LISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITA LISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITA LISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITA LISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM FAST CAPITALISM -
American Muslims: a New Islamic Discourse on Religious Freedom
AMERICAN MUSLIMS: A NEW ISLAMIC DISCOURSE ON RELIGIOUS FREEDOM A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of The School of Continuing Studies and of The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Liberal Studies By John C. R. Musselman, B.A. Georgetown University Washington, D.C. April 13, 2010 AMERICAN MUSLIMS: A NEW ISLAMIC DISCOURSE ON RELIGIOUS FREEDOM John C. R. Musselman, B.A. Mentor: Chris Seiple, Ph.D. ABSTRACT In 1998, the U.S. government made the promotion of religious freedom official policy. This policy has often been met with skepticism and hostility from foreign governments and publics. In the Muslim-majority world, it is commonly seen as an attempt to discredit traditional cultural norms and/or Islamic law, as covert support for American missionary activity, and/or as cultural imperialism. American Muslims could play a key role in changing this perception. To date, the American Muslim community has not become deeply invested in the movement for international religious freedom, but their notable absence has not been treated in any substantial length. This thesis draws on the disciplines of public policy, political science, anthropology, and religious studies to explore this absence, in the process attempting to clarify how the immigrant Muslim American community understands religious freedom. It reviews the exegetical study of Islamic sources in relation to human rights and democracy by three leading American Muslim intellectuals—Abdulaziz Sachedina, M.A. Muqtedar Khan, and Khaled Abou El Fadl—and positions their ideas within the dual contexts of the movement for international religious freedom movement and the domestic political incorporation of the Muslim American community. -
Catalog 11 Mare Booksellers | Email: [email protected] Phone: (603)742-1229
Catalog 11 Mare Booksellers www.marebooksellers.com | email: [email protected] phone: (603)742-1229 Catalog 11… Featuring punk fanzines: Gun Rubber, London’s Burning, Trash ’77 and others new to us. New acquisitions of old favorites such as: All the Young Dudes, The Armagideon Times, Gabba Gabba Gazette, and others. What do punks think of sex and birth control? See entry #43 In the Underground Press: Make paint bombs and knock over lamp posts: entries #54 and #56 Several issues of The Black Panther and Muhammad Speaks: entries #46-49 www.marebooksellers.com | email: [email protected] phone: (603)742-1229 1. Slit Your Wrists if You Can’t Rock and Roll. Philly’s New Wave. No. 2 Various authors. Jack Off, Publisher. Philadelphia: no date, perhaps late 1977, early 1978. Side stapled format. 8 ½ by 11 inches. 18 pp., including covers. Black and white photos throughout. A punk and new wave zine from the Philadelphia area, presenting straight up coverage of various acts. With contributions by Jack Off, Jay Schwartz, Roid Kafka and others. This issue with news/commentary/interviews on The Stranglers, the Cramps, The Reds, The A’s, Elvis Costello and others. GOOD condition. Moderate browning to the piece, a bit heavier along the extremities. Minor wrinkling and edgewear. $125.00 www.marebooksellers.com | email: [email protected] phone: (603)742-1229 2. The Gun Rubber. Summer 1977. Issue #6. Bower, Paul (editor) Paul Bower, Publisher. Sheffield, UK: 1977. Single stapled format. 11 ¾ by 8 ¼ inches. 32 pp., including covers. Printed on different colored and stock paper. -
Resignations Plague TCU Government, Hurt System Ents Object To
THE TUFTSDAILY m,reYou Read It First Thursday, February 10,2000 Volume XL, Number 13 I Resignations plague TCU government, hurt system byMA’ITHEWKANE initiatives. A full vot- ever, new, more rigorous the TCU. “I resigned for many reasons. Daily Editorial Board ing Senate, as defined ELBO policies, combined Most importantly, I didn’t feel that I could Craig Waldman’s resignation as Tufts by the TCU Constitu- with the recurrent resigna- any longer be productive in this student Community Union Judiciary (TCUJ) Co- tion, consists of 29 tions, may make itdifficultto government. I am disappointed with some chair on Monday night was only one in a members. The Senate, fillthevacated seats for some aspects of student government at this mo- series ofresignations that have plagued the which is designed to time, as the deadline for can- ment,” he said. TC U government over the past two years. have equal representa- didate petitions was last Wells also voiced similar disappoint- Eleven TCU members have now resigned tion from each class, night. ment in his resignation statement. “I lost my this year. has only two voting The larger issue sur- desire to be apart ofthis organization. I do This Sunday, at the Senate’s third meet- senators representing rounding the 11 total resig- not feel I can accomplish my goals in the ing ofthe semester, President Larry Harris the senior class and nations in the TCU govern- current confines. The Senate is separated will announce the resignation of freshman three representing the ment-especially the eight and disjointed.. I was disappointed with Debbie Chou, the fourth senator to resign junior class. -
Radicalization”
Policing “Radicalization” Amna Akbar* Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 810 I. Radicalization Briefly Historicized ........................................................................... 818 II. Radicalization Defined and Deconstructed ........................................................... 833 III. Policing the New Terrorism ................................................................................... 845 A. Standards ........................................................................................................ 846 B. Tactics ............................................................................................................. 854 1. Mapping .................................................................................................. 855 2. Voluntary Interviews ............................................................................ 859 3. Informants .............................................................................................. 861 4. Internet Monitoring .............................................................................. 865 5. Community Engagement ..................................................................... 866 IV. Radical Harms ........................................................................................................... 868 A. Religion, Politics, and Geography .............................................................. 869 B. A Fundamental Tension -
Islamism in the IS Age March 17, 2015 Contents
POMEPS STUDIES 12 islam in a changing middle east Islamism in the IS Age March 17, 2015 Contents Analytical frameworks Why academics can’t get beyond moderates and radicals . .. 9 By Jillian Schwedler, Hunter College and Graduate Center, CUNY Vanilla Muslims . 13 By Peter Mandaville, George Mason University What I talk about when I talk about Islamists . 16 By Ahmed Khanani, Indiana University The Islamic State How much of a state is the Islamic State? . 20 By Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young University The Islamic State’s model . 24 By Aaron Y. Zelin, King’s College London Does the Islamic State believe in sovereignty? . 28 By Richard A. Nielsen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Salafi ideas on state-building before and after the rise of the Islamic State . 31 By Joas Wagemakers, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands The Islamic State identity and legacies of Baath rule in Syria’s northeast . 34 By Kevin Mazur, Princeton University Islamists in the region The ISIS-ification of Islamist politics . 37 By Khalil al-Anani, Johns Hopkins University and George Washington University Mutual escalation in Egypt . 39 By Mokhtar Awad, Center for American Progress, and Nathan J. Brown, George Washington University Brotherhood activism and regime consolidation in Egypt . 43 By Steven Brooke, University of Texas at Austin How Egypt’s coup really affected Tunisia’s Islamists . 45 By Monica Marks, University of Oxford Why Tunisia didn’t follow Egypt’s path . 49 By Sharan Grewal, Princeton University The future of the Muslim Brotherhood in the Gulf . .. 52 By Kristin Smith Diwan, American University and George Washington University The Syrian Brotherhood’s Islamic State challenge .