.@slicksean's analysis of the many violences that "settler marxism" elides, ignores, and erases poses an urgent question to all critical thinkers: what is the site of our struggle? https://t.co/48cYgo1oVC
our managing editor, @chaosbogey, meanwhile, wrote a long analysis of the beast we confront and the mercurial shapes of neoliberalism: https://t.co/0tsPADHkab
the editorial, by @BhargavRani, is about the long and mostly forgotten struggle for open admissions at CUNY and what it can teach us about revolution today: https://t.co/GqkVkKUBVd
There is a new issue of the Advocate up online! Our cover story is a long interview between @nsglastonbury and Professor Katherine Verdery about her new book "My Life as a Spy" and the stakes of doing ethnography: https://t.co/9Unba0h64P
"We were the handmaidens of the secret police." Read a new @GC_Advocate interview with Katherine Verdery, author of My Life as a Spy: https://t.co/T5vxbSQY2T
and if you're in India, where *not* feeling outraged isn't really an option these days, never forget Kabir Kala Manch, who taught us how to make that emotion into a weapon against oppression: https://t.co/sTi6uJ802q
on a cheerier note, Sarah Hildebrand's article is about how we can help our students understand digital literacy without fetishizing it: https://t.co/uAMYrUKCu6
hullo, happy spring monday! there's a new issue of the Advocate online, reminding you that if you thought public education was a dystopian hellscape, private schools are worse: https://t.co/A6U5pN2XRt
Pankaj Mishra, incidentally, recently wrote a brilliant (and hilarious!) critique of Jordan Peterson that somewhat paradoxically supports Asher's argument in this review: https://t.co/il47md6KHZ