Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? Free

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? Free FREE CAPITALIST REALISM: IS THERE NO ALTERNATIVE? PDF Mark Fisher | 92 pages | 09 Dec 2013 | John Hunt Publishing | 9781846943171 | English | New Alresford, United Kingdom The Beginning of the End of Capitalist Realism Capitalism rests on the astounding assumption that the most wickedest of men will do the most wickedest of deeds for the greatest good. In latemy book Capitalist Realism was published. I now joke that, as I was completing the book in the wake of the financial crisis ofit felt as if capitalism might be finished before the book was. As we all now know, capitalism didn't collapse—but it would Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? a mistake to think that there is any possibility of a return to business as usual. Capitalist realism can be seen as a belief: that there's no alternative to capitalism, that, as Fredric Jameson put it, it's easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. Other systems might be preferable to capitalism, but capitalism is the only one that is realistic. Or it can be seen as an attitude of resignation and fatalism in the face of this—a sense that all we can do is accommodate ourselves to the dominance of capitalism, and limit our hopes to containing its worst excesses. Fundamentally, it's a pathology of the left, nowhere better exemplified than in the case of New Labour. Ultimately, what capitalist realism amounts to is the elimination of left-wing politics and the naturalisation of neoliberalism. After the wave of militancy that spread across the world inthe BBC's Economics Editor Paul Mason went so far as to declare the end of capitalist realism. The non events of show that judgment to be Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? little hasty. Instead of capitalist realism ending in orit could be argued that the austerity measures that have been implemented have constituted an intensification of capitalist realism. Those measures couldn't have been introduced unless there was still a widespread sense that there is no alternative to neoliberal capitalism. The various struggles that have blown up since the financial crisis show a growing discontent with the panic-neoliberalism that has been put in place sincebut they have yet to propose any concrete alternative to the dominant economic model. Capitalist realism is about a corrosion of social imagination, and in some ways, that remains the problem: after thirty years of neoliberal domination, Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? are only just beginning to be able to imagine alternatives to capitalism. Why is this still the case? Partly, it is because the decomposition of solidarity on which the victory of neoliberalism depended has not yet been reversed. The various anti-capitalist movements up to and including Occupy have not yet constituted a counter-force capable of challenging the super- hegemony of capital. We've become used to a world in Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? workers fear capital, never the reverse. Capitalist realism was never about direct ideological persuasion; it's not that the population of the UK were ever convinced of the merits of neoliberal ideas. But what people have been convinced of is the idea that neoliberalism is the dominant force in the world, and that, consequently, there is little point Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? it. I'm not suggesting that most people recognise neoliberalism by name, but they do recognise the policies and the ideological narrative which neoliberalism has so successfully disseminated. This perception has arisen because capital has subdued the forces acting against it—most obviously, it has crushed unions, or forced them into being consumer or service institutions within capitalism. The situation has changed since the heyday of social democracy, and one of the principal ways in which it has changed is the globalization of capital. Indeed, this is one way that unions were outmanoeuvred: if your members won't work for these rates, we'll go to a place where workers will. The decadence of parliamentary politics in the UK, with three parties all unabashedly representing the interests of capital, is one consequence of the decomposition of workers' solidarity. Under Ed Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?, it is clear that Labour has not yet learned the lesson that the point is not to occupy an already-existing centre ground, but to struggle Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? redefine what the centre ground is. The Thatcherite right had the confidence to plan just such a vertiginous shift of the centre ground in the s, and Labour has been on the back foot ever since. As Stuart Hall so presciently noted in The Hard Road To Renewalfirst published Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?it was the Thatcherites who dared to think and speak in revolutionary terms. Hall wrote:. The truth is that traditionalist ideas, the ideas of social and moral respectability, have penetrated so deep inside socialist consciousness that it is quite common to find people committed to a radical social programme underpinned by wholly traditional feelings and sentiments. Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? remains, now that the socialist consciousness has succumbed to capitalist realism and the radical programme has given way to pragmatic adaptation to a world governed by neoliberalism, is the moralizing gestures and traditionalism alone. Alain Badiou has argued that, with the collapse of the leftist experiments of the twentieth century, we are effectively plunged back into a situation similar to that in the nineteenth century, before the labour movements came together. I think that is correct, and we need to develop the same boldness of thinking, ambition and courage that the founders of the labour movement possessed. But rising to that challenge means that we shouldn't remain attached to the ideas and methods that those groups developed for different times. Instead of depressively reclining at the end of history, looking back longingly at all the failed revolts and revolutions of the past, we need to re-situate ourselves in history and claim the future back for the left. What is certain is that the right now has no monopoly on the future: manifestly, it has run out of ideas. May '68 has left a legacy of anti- institutionalism in the left theoretical currents it has influenced—a legacy that is congruent with many of the assumptions of neoliberalism. But, as the right well understands, politics is not about feel-good parties in the street; it's about controlling and developing institutions. The question is: if the old leftist institutions have declined because they were too associated with Fordism, what institutions will work in the current conditions? Capital isn't literally global, but it is sufficiently global to be able to pit workers from different sides of the planet against each other. Anti-capital, similarly, needs to be globalized enough that workers' interests can be co-coordinated. At the same time, we need to agitate for much more autonomy and control for workers over their immediate work processes—perhaps on the model of work- er-run factories in Latin America. Localism can't tackle global capitalism, and in any case, it is regressive. As Fredric Jameson has argued, capitalism is the most collective Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? that has ever existed on earth, in the sense that even the Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? banal object is the product of a massive web of interdependence. At the moment, this global network is stupid and venal; but rather than abandoning it in favour of some return to agrarianism that will only be possible on the basis of a catastrophe, we need to make the planetary network an intelligent system that can act in the interests of the majority, instead of the tiny minority that profit under the current system. That's not impossible. In fact, we've got an unprecedented opportunity to make it happen. Hall wrote: The truth is that traditionalist ideas, the ideas of social and moral respectability, have penetrated so deep inside socialist consciousness that it is quite common to find people committed to a radical social programme underpinned by wholly traditional feelings and sentiments. By Mark Fisher. Printed in Issue 1 Fucked Get it here. STRIKE! Magazine – Capitalist Realism Mark Fisher struggled his entire life with depression. That struggle culminated in his suicide, two years ago this month. As he wrote in several essays in K-Punk : The Collected and Unpublished Writings of Mark Fisherrecently published by Repeater Books, he came to see depression as also a social affliction. And the social has given us plenty to be depressed about over the past four decades. That voice felt deeply personal, to be sure. Mark saw that resignation to neoliberalism everywhere he looked. And as anyone who picks this book up will see, he looked in many, many places. He saw it in the music of Flo-Rida, Pitbull, and will. He saw that resignation in the Left, in its stubborn commitment to anarchist and anarchist-inspired styles of action and organizing. Tragically, the approach paralyzes these movements, making them unable to take up the urgent task of fighting oppression or much of anything else. Things have been bleak. But I Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? Mark could have held on. I wish he could have held on for selfish reasons: few writers in this world brought the kind of joy and even astonishment to me that he did, through the breadth of his writing, his clarity, his fearlessness. But Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? also wish Mark could have held on because the nightmare of capitalist realism that he spent much of his life wrestling with is finally beginning to break.
Recommended publications
  • BOOKSTORE NEWSLETTER Textbook Lists for Winter 2016 and January 2017 Will Be Posted to the Bookstore Website at the Beginning Of
    Grove City College Bookstore Fall 2016 NAME OUR NEWSLETTER Volume 1, Issue 1 Put your thinking caps on for our first contest — Name Our Newsletter! If you can come up with a BOOKSTORE NEWSLETTER catchy phrase for us to use in our future editions, email Welcome to the first edition of the bookstore.gcc.edu. Bookstore Newsletter! We’ll be striving to The winner will pick up a provide you with all the latest in industry Bookstore prize pack. news, sales, and events and how the Good luck! Bookstore is working for YOU, the student, professor, and staff member here at Grove City College. The Bookstore is your first stop for every- Sales Associate Tina Maxwell thing you need for college. We carry a wide and student employee Sarah selection of Grove City College apparel and Williamson hung out with gifts, in addition to school supplies. We are Willie the Wolverine during Homecoming 2016. owned and operated by the College, which means we operate on a lower profit margin than other bookstores that UPCOMING EVENTS you may be familiar with. Because we are part of the College, our pro- ceeds are invested back into the College, which keeps tuition affordable Nov. 7-8 and enables us to donate to many campus groups, local businesses, and Visit representatives from Jos- tens class rings outside the other charitable organizations. Bookstore. We’ll introduce you to our five full-time and one part-time employees Nov. 18 as well as some of our student employees so that you can get to know us Annual “Friday Before Black better.
    [Show full text]
  • Complete Consolidated Listing of the Entire
    FREELANCE TRAVELLER The Electronic Fan-Supported Traveller® Magazine and Resource Consolidated Article Listing November 2009 – October 2021 This listing is by section; an individual article is listed giving its name, and the article author’s name in parentheses, followed by the issue and page number, separated by a colon. For example, in Critics’ Corner, the review of Mongoose Traveller: Scoundrel was written by Jeff Zeitlin, and appears on page 2 of issue 000 (November 2009). Issue 001 was the January 2010 issue, and subsequent issues are numbered sequentially. Note that some issues before Jan/Feb 2016, such as the May and June 2012 issues, were combined, and carried the numbers and dates for both; the issue:page for articles appearing in combined issues will appear as (e.g.) 029/030:pp. There are no articles listed for issue 90, Nov/Dec 2018; that issue was cancelled due to a death in the Editor’s family. Critics’ Corner 101 Religions (Jeff Zeitlin) .............................................................................................................................. 101: 2 1248 Sourcebook 3: The Spinward States (David Johnson) ........................................................................ 101:17 21 Organizations (“kafka”) ............................................................................................................................. 043:14 21 Plots (Jeff Zeitlin) ........................................................................................................................................ 038:17
    [Show full text]
  • A Text Adventure: on Reading During Lockdown Thomas Jellis University of Bristol [email protected] ______
    Thinking Space: Jellis 302 A Text Adventure: On Reading During Lockdown Thomas Jellis University of Bristol [email protected] _____________________________________ The paper now finished, he wonders aloud: should there be an introduction of sorts? And, if so, is it enough to say that an unnamed person (who may, or may not, be the author), presents a series of reflections on trying to read during lockdown? And should he mention that it was the call for ‘shorter submissions, including the more ... impressionistic’ which caught his attention? And should he say that he's still pondering the right title, the mode of address, or the inclusion of that book? Perhaps. Literary Geographies 6(2) 2020 302-313 Thinking Space: Jellis 303 Figure 1. Still from Kentucky Route Zero, Act I. For him, like many others at the outset of lockdown, there was the prospect of finally reading those texts that had sat on the shelf for some time, untouched. Many were in the office, of course, still in boxes following a new post. He remembers, vividly, thinking about what to take home with him on his last day in that room; lockdown a ‘not-yet’, the on-going strikes at the forefront of discussion with colleagues. He chose books almost at random from the various boxes; some old favourites for reassurance, others that ought to be read; others that he may well have claimed to have read; and still others that he did not remember owning. A return to those boxed-up books seemed a remote possibility for some time, and attention turned to more immediate concerns, like the next meal, the one outing a day, the next online grocery order, the near constant tidying up.
    [Show full text]
  • Chatterbooks Book List Wonderful Non-Fiction!
    Chatterbooks Book List Wonderful Non-Fiction! Wonderful Non-Fiction! – The books Enjoy this great selection of information books on all kinds of subjects – arranged in Dewey Decimal Code order! See if you can find more books in your school or public library with the same numbers! 001 General Knowledge: reference books and encyclopaedias Browse these books together and choose favourite amazing facts with which to wow your friends! A World of Information Richard Platt & James Brown Walker 978-1406370843 This is a bright and attractive book full of incredible facts and figures, covering more than 30 topics. Do you know how many bones there are in the human body or how clouds form? Or about different types of knots or how Morse code works? Richard Platt is the author of Castle Diary, Egyptian Diary and Pirate Diary, which won the Blue Peter Best Book with Facts Award. My Encyclopaedia of Very Important Things DK 978-0241224939 Full of fun facts, colourful illustrations, and games that will feed a child’s imagination, this book is perfect for 4 to 7 year olds. It is split into four sections, All About Me, Animals, People, and My Planet. Knowledge Encyclopaedia: Animal! John Woodward DK 978-0241228418 From the wings of the albatross to the deadly facts of the great white shark, this book takes you into the exciting world of the animal kingdom. Exploring everything from habitats and ecosystems to senses and respiration, it is easy to follow and full of fun facts, with amazing 3D images. For children aged 9+. See also these further titles in the Knowledge Encyclopaedia series: Dinosaur! 978-1409354673 Space! 978-0241196304 Page 2 of 16 005 Computer programming Three books to get you going on creating your own games, blogs, vlogs and podcasts! In each of them you’ll find lots of practical tips and activities.
    [Show full text]
  • Psikologi Humanistikdalam Perilaku Bibliomania Di Kalangan Mahasiswailmu Perpustakaan Uin Sunan Kalijagayogyakarta
    PSIKOLOGI HUMANISTIKDALAM PERILAKU BIBLIOMANIA DI KALANGAN MAHASISWAILMU PERPUSTAKAAN UIN SUNAN KALIJAGAYOGYAKARTA Anis Masruri Universitas Islam Negeri Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta [email protected] Fina Maulidina Universitas Islam Negeri Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta [email protected] Abstract This research is a qualitative descriptive study, an analysis of humanistic psychology of bibliomania behavior experienced by students of the UIN Sunan Kalijaga Library Science. The condition where a person has an obsessive-compulsive form of excessive desire to collect books continuously. The goal of research is to know someone's psychological desire to buy a book and feel relieved in collecting books even though not read. the main motivation in gathering lots of books is just to add to his own insight but when someone has a love and passion for reading books, then all desires related to books will be an extraordinary intellectual adventure. So it is not surprising, when a person can be infected with bibliolism, if he has an excessive desire to buy, read, save, and enjoy books. It's better to love books and buy books naturally, if there is still a large collection of books stored and unread, then hold to buy more books. after reading a book it would be nice to give a review or some kind of ability to write from the results of reading a book. From this creative attitude, we can develop the skills and potential we have to build a civilized nation. Keywords : humanistic psychology, book lovers, Bibliomania, behavior 43 Abstrak Penelitian ini merupakan penelitian deskriptif kualitatif, suatu analisis psikologi humanistik dari perilaku bibliomania yang dialami oleh mahasiswa Ilmu Perpustakaan UIN Sunan Kalijaga.
    [Show full text]
  • Iontelligence Brief Newsletter 13 | Reading
    Strategic Advice for Work and Life IoNTELLIGENCE Brief | Newsletter 13 Key Points ● Theme: The Relationship between Reading and Knowledge ​ ● Acceleration Tip: Read every day. Mostly books. Ideally printed ones ​ ● Thinking Tool: Thinking by Communicating ​ ​ ​ ● Playlist: The Information Diet, Lifelong Learning and Reading Print ​ ​ ​ Newspapers ● Philosophical Espresso Shot: What two of the richest men in the ​ world recommend that you do, too ​ ​ ● Reading Time: 6 Minutes ​ Did you know that there is a Japanese word for buying books that you don’t read? This ​ habit - one that I exhibit, sadly - is actually so universal that they created a term for it: 積ん読 or tsundoku . It combines the words “tsunde” (meaning “to stack things”), “oku” ​ ​ (meaning “to leave for a while”) and “doku” (meaning “to read”). We’ve always had a complicated relationship with the written word. Socrates feared the arrival of books and favored oral communication, yet his disciple Plato secretly wrote down his famous dialogues (and thanks to him we know what Socrates thought). Socrates feared what writing would do to our ability to think. I believe that he turned out to be wrong (maybe the only time I’ll ever disagree with the great man!), but like him, I am nervous about a similar transition we’re making today - from books to screens, emails to text messages, and words to emoticons. Reading is an activity we have to preserve and even increase, however. It allows us to commune with some of the greatest minds across time and space, imparting wisdom and building knowledge. Finally, I submit that reading books, in particular, is the antidote to this attention-deficit age ​ ​ because, as Joseph Epstein points out, “we are what we read.” Read on to see why ..
    [Show full text]
  • The ANZAAB Newsletter, August 2018
    WWW.ANZAAB.COM | AUGUST 2018 The occasional newsletter of The Australian & New Zealand Association of Antiquarian Booksellers A message from the President NEWS & JOTTINGS Once again, ANZAAB and Rare Books Melbourne (RBM) have Congratulations to Mr Robert Johnston of organised a very successful Melbourne Rare Book Week (MRBW) Melbourne who has won the Lucky Door and Melbourne Rare Book Fair, held in early July. On behalf of both Prize of the 2018 Melbourne Rare Book ANZAAB and RBM, I thank all the 25 MRBW partners, and their Fair. The prize of $500 redeemable with speakers, for staging 45 wonderful events which included lectures, any ANZAAB member. A full report of the exhibitions, workshops, musical performances, presentations and Fair can be found starting on p. 21 inside. discussions. It is very pleasing to see that MRBW is drawing interstate visitors and has become a noteworthy event in the Melbourne literary calendar. I am also grateful to the many MRBW sponsors who have once again supported us by opening their premises and giving freely of their time and energy to assist in making MRBW so enjoyable. This Newsletter overviews the program, including the Book Fair. I give a special thank you to Professor Chris Browne and artist Alissa Duke who attended the vast majority of the events. Chris’s reports and Alissa’s sketches are included in this Newsletter. The Book Fair was once again held in The University of Melbourne’s Wilson Hall, preceded by an opening cocktail party hosted by Ms Gwenda Thomas, the recently appointed University Librarian. To Gwenda, and The University, ANZAAB extends its gratitude for its ongoing support and sponsorship.
    [Show full text]
  • Kaisha-Shi: a Brief Glimpse of Japanese Company Histories and Company Culture
    Journal of East Asian Libraries Volume 2001 Number 124 Article 6 6-1-2001 Kaisha-shi: A Brief Glimpse of Japanese Company Histories and Company Culture Eizaburo Okuizumi Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/jeal BYU ScholarsArchive Citation Okuizumi, Eizaburo (2001) "Kaisha-shi: A Brief Glimpse of Japanese Company Histories and Company Culture," Journal of East Asian Libraries: Vol. 2001 : No. 124 , Article 6. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/jeal/vol2001/iss124/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of East Asian Libraries by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. KAISHASHIKAISHA SHI BRIEF GLIMPSE JAPANESE COMPANY HISTORIES COMPANY CULTURE eizaburo okuizumiOkuizumi university chicagoz1za note originally paper presented ath4th international conference japanese information science technology industry business held newcastlle upon tyne united kingdom september 585 8 1995 paper revised updated presentation company japanese histories interest group meetingzlal annual meetingz1za association asian studies held chicago march 2001 introduction kaishadaisha shi publication providingC companascompanyscompanys history usually written compiled produced distributed company daishakaisha shi impressively compiled works generally rangingz1za tn hundred several hundred pagesZ cases even historical illustrations
    [Show full text]
  • VOL. LXXXVIII, NO. 7 | 1 APRIL 2020 REVIEWS the Earth Issue
    Featuring 331 Industry-First Reviews of Fiction, Nonfiction, Children'sand YA books KIRKUSVOL. LXXXVIII, NO. 7 | 1 APRIL 2020 REVIEWS The Earth Issue Conversations with Hope Jahren, Michael Christie, Anuradha Rao, and more from the editor’s desk: Chairman Writing To Save the Planet HERBERT SIMON President & Publisher BY TOM BEER MARC WINKELMAN # Chief Executive Officer MEG LABORDE KUEHN [email protected] Photo courtesy John Paraskevas courtesy Photo Few world figures in recent years have been as inspiring as Greta Thun- Editor-in-Chief TOM BEER berg, the 16-year-old Swedish activist who is the face of today’s environmental [email protected] Vice President of Marketing movement. Her example led tens of thousands of students across Europe to SARAH KALINA skip school on Fridays to protest government inaction on climate change and [email protected] Managing/Nonfiction Editor still more young people and adults to march in the streets of the world’s cit- ERIC LIEBETRAU [email protected] ies. She has addressed the United Nations. She was nominated for the Nobel Fiction Editor LAURIE MUCHNICK Peace Prize. In December, she was named Time magazine’s Person of the Year. [email protected] Children’s Editor Sixteen of Thunberg’s remarkable speeches were recently collected in No VICKY SMITH [email protected] One Is Too Small To Make a Difference (2019). In a starred review, Kirkus called Young Adult Editor Tom Beer it “a tiny book, not much bigger than a pamphlet, with huge potential impact.” LAURA SIMEON [email protected] It’s just one of the dozens of outstanding titles about climate change and the environment that cross Editor at Large MEGAN LABRISE our desks here at Kirkus.
    [Show full text]
  • The Screwtape Letters Book Cover
    The Screwtape Letters Book Cover Carping Kirby overstrode jarringly. Exegetic Mohammad generalized very grinningly while Wit remains livelong and hurtful. Frederich wades generically. Screwtape Letters Part 1 The weld Road to Nowhere Vritti. Books like The Screwtape Letters include The Screwtape Letters Also Includes. Western thought necessary for those members included j r r tolkien, the screwtape letters with difficulties? The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis Lynn Baber. The Screwtape Letters CS Lewis 970060652937. The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis BOOK COVER ORG XMIT 1002191533541365. This says Screwtape is express the poet John Milton described such occurrences in quest It can be seen within an irresistible change caused by significant growing turmoil at Wormwood. This amend the snowball That Jack Built Classic Books with Holes Soft Cover. Buy The Screwtape Letters by C S Lewis online at Alibris We rivet new and used copies. It is advised to the book long as such good demon, that they could be drafted. The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis bookschristineread. The Screwtape Letters is a Christian apologetic novel by C S Lewis and dedicated to JRR. The Screwtape letters with Screwtape proposes a toast Book could Cover. Who daily experience where the sorrow of illusion? The gasp of script which is used in this book cannot be given easily obtained by. As per book cover reads The Screwtape Letters is joint most engaging account of temptationand triumph over itever written It spans 175. Why does Screwtape turn last a centipede? A witness of Part X Section1 in CS Lewis's The Screwtape Letters.
    [Show full text]
  • 9780979589805.Pdf
    Introduction by Eric Olsen A common theme runs through the 28 contributions in this third volume of our Best of Books by the Bed collection, and that theme is mess. Besides discussing the books they’re cur- rently reading at night before dropping off to sleep, or books they’re planning to read next, or books they have read but haven’t quite gotten around to putting away, a rather intriguing number of our contributors also talk about the mess of books by their beds, starting with Dale Bridges and his “tome tow- ers,” “disjointed Jenga-like constructions that appear stable but crash to the floor if you look at them funny.” Now I can’t look—whether funny or any other way—at the stacks of books by my own bed, at that mess, without thinking “tome towers,” and thank you very much, Dale, for that image …. Mary Morris tells us about a Japanese word she recently discovered that perhaps most typifies her particular afflic- tion when it comes to books: Tsundoku. It roughly translates to “someone who buys books and lets them pile up without reading them.” Mary writes, “I suffer somewhat from this trait. I buy books because I just must have them and then they sit around, sometimes for years, before I actually read them. The books at my bedside flow over to the dresser and then out into several piles stacked in the hall.” I’m likewise afflicted, and I must say it’s nice to finally have a name for the affliction, not that having a name for it moderates in any way my impulse to buy books I may never get around to reading.
    [Show full text]
  • Thebookmark V1, Issue 9
    THE BOOKMARK A Monthly Library Newsletter May 2018 Vol. 1 Issue 9 IN THE ISSUE New Programs Starting Page 2 this Spring C e l e b r a ting Mom Page 3 New Additions Page 4 “Have a heart that never hardens, and a temper that never tires, and a touch that never hurts.” - Charles Dickens The Bookmark - Page 2 May 2018 A New Program for Adults with Developmental Disabilities The Azusa Library has been family to learn, create, share, and working these past months to participate in the I CAN engage children and adults in workshops. Day programs will reading, life-long learning, and also be welcomed to participate. computer literacy. Our work Each month's workshop will be has brought us to a point where held in the daytime and focus on we have seen an interest and a new topic. need to create engaging programs and services for The Library will be announcing adults with cognitive and the new program mid-May with developmental disabilities its first workshop scheduled late (AWDD). Starting this May, the May. Stay tuned for a release of Library will begin a series of dates for this summer's programs encouraging AWDDs I CAN schedule. and their caregivers and/or The Adult Reading Room's Newest Addition A modest addition, a new book display, is coming this May to be housed in the Adult Reading Room. Check in for dynamic book displays, creations from our 3D printer, and selections from an array of reading collections. - 2 - The Bookmark - Page 3 May 2018 Mother's Day Biblio Fact Paint Night The Japanese language has a word, ‘tsundoku,’ which means buying a It's back! This time, dedicated to those number of books and then not getting special ladies in our lives.
    [Show full text]