Featured Essay
Overture: The More Things Change…
Once, the basic building block of patriarchy was the nuclear family, and calling for its abolition was a radical demand. Now families are increasingly fragmented—yet has this fundamentally expanded women’s power or children’s autonomy?
Once, the mainstream media consisted of only a few television and radio channels. These have not only multiplied into infinity but are being supplanted by forms of media such as Facebook, Youtube, and Twitter. But has this done away with passive consumption? And how much more control over these formats do users really have, structurally speaking?
Once, movies represented the epitome of a society based on spectatorship; today, video games let us star in our own shoot-'em-up epics, and the video game industry does as much business as Hollywood. In an audience watching a movie, everyone is alone; the most you can do is boo if the storyline outrages you. In the new video games, on the other hand, you can interact with virtual versions of other players in real time. But is this greater freedom? Is it more togetherness?
Once, one could speak of a social and cultural mainstream, and subculture itself seemed subversive. Now “diversity” is at a premium for our rulers, and subculture is an essential motor of consumer society: the more identities, the more markets.
Recent Blog posts
• Serbia: Fake Revolutions, Real Struggles [Oct 14th]
• Test Their Logik Benefit Album [Sep 30th]
• Brand New Legal Support Tactics! [Sep 8th]
• Overview: Toronto G20 Legal Fallout [Sep 3rd]
• Fighting in the New Terrain [Aug 23rd]
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new content
• Test Their Logik Benefit Album [Blog / Sep 30th]
• Rolling Thunder #5 Complete PDF [Journal / Sep 30th]
• Fighting in the New Terrain [Texts / Aug 23rd]
• Against Ideology? [Texts / Aug 11th]
• Do You Have Ideas, or Do Ideas Have You? [Texts / Aug 4th]
• The Police Poster PDF [Downloads / July 9th]
• Rolling Thunder #9 [Journal / March 3rd]
• Say You Want an Insurrection [Texts / Jan 7th]
Featured Project
Rolling Thunder #9
This issue assesses anarchist action at the 2009 G20 summit; the accompanying Pittsburgh scene report examines a decade of local organizing. We scrutinize protest and resistance on campus and overseas in the Smash EDO campaign. Plus obscure Russian history, a reappraisal of the concept of “free speech,” and the usual stunning prose.106 pages, 16 in full color.
Featured Project
Expect Resistance
Our third book is an exploration of the complex relationship between ideals and reality; a field manual for a field on which all manuals are useless, a meditation on individual transformation and collective resistance in disastrous times, and a masterpiece that raises the bar for radical publishing.