extremely excited to share these poems about the various hells we find ourselves in and the things that sustains us as we try to find our way to the other side
Hot off the press today, too, is Inferno, by Andrew Brooks. We are so excited for this incredible book to be readers' hands! Poems as staunch as they are kind. We love you, @rat_steak! See thread for more info on this candy pink number...
“… they punish her for her ghosts while actively resurrecting her demons.”
My latest published offering- an intimate collection of words organised into four scenes- part poetry, part essay, part call to action
Check out @rosa_collective
The pamphlets document solidarity and survival (across essay, memoir, and poetry) against torture and incarceration and within sex worker labour militancy. Postage for bundles is $3 for anywhere in Australia and $10 for anywhere else in the world.
We are thrilled to announce that the second pamphlet series is now available on the Rosa Press website (https://t.co/mj66tXq96j): three softcover, pocket-sized titles from Tabitha Lean | Budhin Mingaan, Carlos Soto-Román, and Chelsea Hart sold as a single bundle. (1/2)
Looking for interesting examples of data visualisations that show something about the social/political/historical conditions of the data. Hit me up....
'the proletariat is found, like power, anywhere there’s people'. great piece on the recomposition of class as grounded in wagelessness and dispossession. Class politics is race politics
'The gimmick, is, therefore, perhaps the aesthetic category that captures the affective experience of life as mediated by the capital relation.'
NEW on SRB this week: @astridlorange on Sianne Ngai.
https://t.co/El5Or9zLIc
@redmaterialism Sorry to be unclear. I am trying to get at a) but in the first instance by pointing to examples of b) as things that can instruct instruct reading practices. The aim is get students to develop critical reading practice in relation to data. Du Bois is on the syllabus!
@redmaterialism this would be great. but also data that incorporates metadata in some way. looking for examples for teaching that go beyond the presumption that data is objective and instead show something that about the conditions of its generation. does that make sense?
Seeking permissions for the citation of David Henderson’s poem ‘Keep on Pushin’ and Baraka’s Black People! in a chapter for a collection on riot poems. Anyone have any leads on publishers - running into endless dead ends?